The word 'collage' arrived in English at the same moment as the art form it named — a rare instance of a new technique and its vocabulary entering the language simultaneously. French 'collage' meant simply 'gluing' or 'pasting,' from the verb 'coller' (to glue, stick), which descended through Vulgar Latin '*colla' from Greek 'kolla' (κόλλα, glue). The Greek word had no artistic associations; it referred to the substance used by bookbinders, carpenters, and craftsmen to join surfaces together.
The artistic revolution occurred in Paris in 1912, when Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque began incorporating non-art materials into their Cubist paintings. Braque's 'Fruit Dish and Glass' (September 1912) included strips of faux-bois wallpaper glued to the canvas — the first papier colle (pasted paper). Picasso's 'Still Life with Chair Caning' (May 1912) incorporated a piece of oilcloth printed with a chair-caning pattern, along with a rope frame. These works shattered the convention
The term 'collage' was applied to this technique by the artists themselves or their circle, and it entered the critical vocabulary almost immediately. The word was perfectly chosen: it named the art by its method (gluing), avoiding any claim about what the result should look like or mean. This procedural definition was appropriate for a technique that was, by nature, open-ended — anything that could be glued down could become part of a collage.
Greek 'kolla' (glue) produced a small but interesting family of English words. 'Collagen' — the protein that forms the structural framework of connective tissue in the body — literally means 'glue-producer,' because early chemists obtained glue by boiling animal skin and bones, which are rich in collagen. 'Protocol' derives from Greek 'prōtokollon' (the first sheet glued to a papyrus manuscript roll), which served as a table of contents or authentication. 'Colloid' (a substance of glue-like consistency) is another descendant. In each case,
The collage technique proved revolutionary not just for visual art but for the broader culture of the twentieth century. By incorporating fragments of the real world (newspapers, tickets, fabric, labels) into art, Picasso and Braque broke down the barrier between art and life, between representation and reality. A newspaper clipping in a collage is simultaneously a real object and an artistic element — it retains its identity as a piece of the world while serving a compositional and expressive function within the artwork.
This principle — assemblage from heterogeneous sources — became one of the defining aesthetic strategies of modernism and postmodernism. The Dadaists (Hannah Hoch, Kurt Schwitters, Raoul Hausmann) extended collage into photomontage and assemblage. The Surrealists (Max Ernst, Joseph Cornell) used collage to create uncanny juxtapositions. Pop artists (Robert Rauschenberg, Richard Hamilton) made collage the foundation of their practice. In every case, the word 'collage' named the same fundamental operation: taking things that already exist and sticking them together in new combinations.
The metaphorical extension of 'collage' has been equally productive. A musical collage combines sampled sounds. A literary collage assembles fragments of text from different sources. A 'collage of memories' describes the way the mind pastes together disparate recollections. In film, the collage aesthetic influenced montage editing. In digital culture
The word's journey from Greek glue-pot to the avant-garde galleries of Paris to the everyday vocabulary of creativity traces one of the most consequential aesthetic innovations of the twentieth century. The simple act of gluing one thing to another — of assembling fragments rather than creating from scratch — challenged centuries of assumptions about what art is, how it is made, and what materials it can use.