Friday, December 3, 2010

The Three Ages of women

Around 1905, after having completed such works as Judith I and the university paintings, Gustav Klimt paintingsThe Three Ages of women”. It was his first allegory that did not rely on historical and mythological figures. It was also the beginning of the larger multi figure allegories that took up much of the artist’s time in his later years.

Three Ages of Women depicts three women at different times of their lives. The youngest is the baby. She is in turn being held by the mother, still young but an adult. Last is the old woman, standing next to them and looking down. The three figures are set against a symbolic background so common in Klimt’s work. These symbols hold the energy of life and surrounds our main three figures. Outside this area, which holds all three figures, more uniform colors of gold and darkness prevail, a void that is close by but for now kept at bay. This structure also helps ensuring that our focus is kept on the three central figures.

The same three figures can be made out in both Medicine and Death and Life, other paintings by Klimt. After the death of his son Otto in 1902, Klimt became increasingly occupied with the subject of death and that can have helped lead to these paintings. As is customary for Klimt, notice that the focus is always on the female shape in these paintings.

Three ages of Women can today be found at the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna in Rome, Italy.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Klimt's Death and Life

Among the master pieces of Gustav Klimt, Death and Life won the first price at the world exhibition in Rome in 1911. The award was a great honor for Gustav Klimt paintings and also a clear indication of his standing within the artistic community.
 
Death and Life has two very clearly separated parts. To the left, we see Death. Death is depicted and the classic grim reaper, a grinning skull, covered in a dark robe covered with symbols. The main symbol we see covering Death is that of the cross.
 

To the right we see life. We see a number of young women lying on a flower bed. We have seen similar flower beds before, e.g. in The Kiss We see a newly created life, a baby, lying in their arms. We see a muscular man holding one of the women and we see an older woman also lying in the middle of the group. The depiction thus covers people, young and old, with a focus on the adults in their best age. There is an over representation of women in the painting which could refer to women as the source of all life. It could also reflect Klimt’s preference for depiction women, preferably somewhat undressed. All the subjects are somewhat covered by cloth bearing numerous symbols.

The composition and execution is thus typical Klimt, with symbols taking a center stage. The scene on the flower bed is also reminiscent of Klimt’s The Virgin, though the presence of a man, child and older woman are differences. Still, the overall depiction is very similar.
 
The title and order of things is another interesting facet of this painting. You would normally refer to Life and Death but Klimt depicts it otherwise, as if Death comes first, stalking life.
 

Death and Life can today be found in a private collection.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

The Subject in Art

A look at the subjects of art from the perspective of great painters such as Van Gogh and Claude Monet and how they helped to change the way that people viewed great art. This change from the renaissance splendor to more ordinary subjects whose beauty would normally be overlooked. read the full article of The Subject in Art

Avenue in the Park of Kammer Castle

When thinking of the mature works of Klimt, depictions of gold and symbols are what most readily come to mind. Indeed, with works like The Kiss and Adele Bloch-Bauer I among his work, it is works like these that have come to define Klimt the artist. However, it is also not the complete story about Klimt. He also did paint other more traditional pieces. Indeed, some works had a more post-impressionist vibe almost like the works of Van Gogh. A case in point is Avenue in the Park of Kammer Castle, which was painted by Gustav Klimt in 1912.
 
The painting depicts the tree lined cobblestone street leading down to the castle. The trees lining the street show off their long brown limps leading to more lush green crowns at the top. Beyond these road trees, even more greenery is also visible. Beyond we see the yellow castle building with its red roof and wooden gate. The depiction is not exact but rather relies on color over line and some freedom of interpretation by Klimt. This is in line with a post-impressionistic streak we do not normally see from the artist. The brush strokes of Gustav Klimt paintings remain gentle and hidden, however.
 

Today, Avenue in the Park of Kammer Castle can be seen at the Belvedere in Vienna.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Hygeia

Trained as an architectural painter, Gustav Klimt paintings contributed to the interior decorations of numerous public buildings in Vienna. Among the more famous cases are the faculty paintings he completed for the University of Vienna in the years 1900-07. The three paintings, Medicine, Philosophy and Jurisprudence, covered three central faculties at the school. The paintings were unfortunately all destroyed by retreating SS forces in May 1945.

 

The second of the three works was unveiled at the tenth Secession Exhibition in 1901. This work covered Medicine. In the painting we find a river of life running in the upper part, with a floating girl and her newborn symbolizing life and a skeleton within the river of life symbolizing its ties to death. In the lower part of the painting, we find Hygeia, the Greek goodness of health, cleanliness and sanitation and daughter of the god of medicine. Standing there in her red robes, the Aesculapius snake is wrapped around her arm while she is holding the cup of Lethe in her hand (the drinking of which results in the loss of memory). A photo of Hygeia taken before the destruction of the painting ensures that we have a clear view of how this masterful depiction looked.

 

In the painting, we see Hygeia somewhat turning her back to mankind. She seems aloof and somewhat abstracted. Combined with the river of life present, it provides a sort of an ambiguous unity of life and death in the painting. This ambiguous unity was interpreted as a lacking role for medicine in curing the sick and preventing death. The piece was thus widely criticized for this when it was first revealed. The faculty paintings were also accused of being perverted and pornographic, though that is hardly unusual for works of Klimt at this time.
 

Still, the look and pose of Hygeia is one of power and deferred interest. She looks majestic in her red robe with golden symbols, as she considers her interest in what lays before her. It is a true Klimt master piece and one that highly deserves reproduction, so that we can once again enjoy its forceful beauty.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Birch Forest (Buchenwald)

Looking at the works of Gustav Klimt, it is clearly his use of gold, his symbolism and to a certain extend his femme fatales that stand out. Klimt painted The Kiss, Judith I and Adele Bloch-Bauer I and II and all of these paintings stand out as highly unique masterpieces.
However, not all of Klimt’s paintings were equally golden, equally erotic or equally full of direct symbolism. A good example of a completely different painting from is Birch Forest (Buchenwald) painted by Klimt in 1901. There is no gold, no woman and no direct symbols, unless the trees themselves are seen as such.
However, some of Klimt’s trademarks still remain. The painting is first of all decently sized at 110x110 cm. The second is Klimt’s technique. The trees are almost combinations of rectangles, the leaves carefully yet numerously rendered, not unlike the flower bed in The Kiss but in greater detail. The base of the trees are similarly colored in the manner of the background from The Kiss, with an almost foggy combination of the same colors, almost like pointillism without points, instead applying varied shapes. As such, even in this beautiful forest depiction, the work of Klimt is still visible, indeed shines through.
The Birch Wood can today be found on display at the Wolfgang-Gurlitt-Museum in Germany. 

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Judith carrying the head of Holofernes

Painted by Gustav Klimt in 1901, the painting depicts Judith carrying the head of Holofernes. See more Gustav Klimt reproductions.

Originally told in the Book of Judith, Judith was a beautiful resourceful Israelite widow at the time when the Israelites were occupied by the Assyrians. With her maid she went to the camp of the Assyrian leader, General Holofernes, where she ingratiated herself while promising secret intel about her countrymen. Once she had gotten close enough to the general, she entered his tent one night while he was drunk and cut off his head and brought the head back to her countrymen. Fearful at the loss of their leader, the Assyrians dispersed and Israel was saved.

The painting by Klimt shows Judith carrying the head of Holofernes, thought the head in left in the lower right corner of the painting, allowing us to instead focus on Judith. She is wearing a flowing veil that unveils more than it covers, thus exposing her naked breast. Her eyes are half closed and her lips slightly parted, given the impression of almost sexual satisfaction with her deed. Klimt’s Judith is indeed a femme fatale, a vamp before that expression was ever invented.

Judith’s veil and the background meanwhile feature the gold and symbols that became Klimt’s trademark.

Judith I by Klimt is in the collection of Österreichische Galerie in Vienna, Austria.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Painting of Danae


Symbolist master Gustav Klimt painted Danae in 1907. The painting is based on the familiar Greek about Danae, daughter of the king of Argos. In the myth, it is foretold that the king will die at the hands of his daughters son. In order to avoid this destiny, the king has his daughter, Danae, locked up in a tower of Bronze. However, while there she is visited by Zues, in the form of a shower of gold, who impregnates her. She later gives birth to Perseus who in turn later, though accidentally, kills her father.

In the Klimt painting, the eroticism of the situation is hardly understated. The shower of gold that is Zeus is flowing freely between the legs of Danae. Meanwhile, her eyes are closed, her lips slightly parted and she definitely looks aroused. She is giving herself to the king of the gods. While lying there, she is covered only by a thin veil in the color of royal purple. The color of the veil is a further indication of her imperial lineage, with purple being the imperial color.

Should you wish to view this highly erotic symbolist painting “live”, it is on display at the Galerie Würthle in Vienna, Austria.

Pallas Athene

“...Her terrible eyes shining...” (Iliad I.200)

The above quote from the Iliad talks about the gaze of Greek goddess Pallas Athene, whose worship was the state religion of ancient Athens. Athene was the goddess of wisdom and war, not an entirely logical combination, but her personality and appearance was suited for the mix. She was an almost asexual goddess, by some called a man in a woman’s body, an androgynous deity. However, she was also the favorite of heroes and artists, would-be heroes and poets.

Klimt’s depiction of Pallas Athene is less sexually laden than other female portraits produced by the artist. It is not the sheer sexuality of the goddess that is in focus, though it could be said that the power exhumed from her alone is enough to cause some sexual tension.

Behind the goddess, we see numerous of the characters of Greek myth. There is Heracles, the Medusa, and her own totem owl. None look fit to in any way compete with the power of the goddess, she is above and beyond them all. She is the guardian of Athens and the thought alone of going up against her should intimidate any man. Her eyes alone, as also explained in the Iliad quote above, show the futility of going against her will. Klimt makes sure we see that her gaze alone is more than can be taken by mortal man. See more Gustav Klimt paintings which you can have painted as reproduction artwork for your home.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

About Gustav Klimt

Gustav Klimt an Austrian Symbolism Painter born on July 14, 1862 was one of the most celebrated members of the Vienna movement. Some of Klimt's major works include paintings, murals, sketches and other art objects. Klimt's tertiary subject was the female body and his works are marked by a frank eroticism, nowhere is this more apparent than in his numerous drawings in pencil.

Art historians note an eclectic range of influences making up Klimt's distinct style, including Egyptian, Minoan, Classical Greek and Byzantine inspirations. His mature works are characterized by a rejection of earlier naturalistic styles, and make use of symbols or symbolic elements to convey psychological ideas and emphasize the "freedom" of art from traditional culture.

Klimt's work is often defined by elegant gold or coloured decoration, spirals and swirls, and phallic shapes used to camouflage the more erotic positions of the drawings upon which many of his paintings are based. This can be seen in Judith I (1901), and in The Kiss (1907-1908), and especially in Danae (1907). One of the most associated themes Klimt used was that of the dominant woman, the femme fetale

Klimt died on February 6, 1918 and today some of Klimt's paintings have brought some of the foremost prices recorded for individual works of art. Enjoy reading about Gustav Klimt and Gustav Klimt paintings.