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Klimt Gustave | 1862-1918 | [ Back | Photos ]
"Gustav Klimt first made himself
known by the decorations he executed
(with his brother and their art school
companion F. Matsch), for numerous
theatres and above all (on his own
this time) for the Kunsthistorisches
Museum in Vienna, where he completed,
in a coolly photographic style, the
work begun by Makart.
At the age of thirty he moved into
his own studio and turned to easel
painting. At thirty-five he was one
of the founders of the Vienna Secession;
he withdrew eight years later, dismayed
by the increasingly strong trend towards
naturalism.
"The coruscating sensuality of Klimt's
work might seem in perfect accord
with a society which recognized itself
in those frivolous apotheoses of happiness
and well-being, the operettas of Johann
Strauss and Franz Léhar. Nothing could
be further from the truth. Far from
being acknowledged as the representative
artist of his age, Klimt was the target
of violent criticism; his work was
sometimes displayed behind a screen
to avoid corrupting the sensibilities
of the young. His work is deceptive.
Today we see in it the Byzantine
luxuriance of form, the vivid juxtaposition
of colors derived from the Austrian
rococo - aspects so markedly different
from the clinical abruptness of Egon
Schiele. But we see it with expectations
generated by epochs of which his own
age was ignorant. "For the sumptuous
surface of Klimt's work is by no means
carefree. Its decorative tracery expresses
a constant tension between ecstasy
and terror, life and death.
Even the portraits, with their timeless
aspect, may be perceived as defying
fate. Sleep, Hope (a pregnant woman
surrounded by baleful faces) and Death
are subjects no less characteristic
than the Kiss. Yet life's seductions
are still more potent in the vicinity
of death, and Klimt's works, although
they do not explicitly speak of impending
doom, constitute a sort of testament
in which the desires and anxieties
of an age, its aspiration to happiness
and to eternity, receive definitive
expression.
For the striking two-dimensionality
with which Klimt surrounds his figures
evokes the gold ground of Byzantine
art, a ground that, in negating space,
may be regarded as negating time -
and thus creating a figure of eternity.
Yet in Klimt's painting, it is not
the austere foursquare figures of
Byzantine art that confront us, but
ecstatically intertwined bodies whose
flesh seems the more real for their
iconical setting of gold."
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