Gustav
Klimt, Austrian
Born in Vienna, Austria, 14 July 1862
Died in Vienna, Austria, 06 February 1918
"Whoever
wants to know something about me must observe my paintings
carefully and try to see in them what I am."
Gustav Klimt
Gustav
Klimt explored the themes of beauty, eroticism, life
and death through his subjects, embellishing them
with richly patterned surfaces. Although he is best
known for his paintings, however he also produced
thousands of drawings. Public commissions were the
basis of his early success, but he later broke with
traditional Viennese art society and formed the Vienna
Secession, promoting the advancement and exposure
of modern art in Austria. At 14 years of age in 1876,
Klimt received a scholarship to the School of Applied
Arts in Vienna where he studied drawing and decorative
painting until 1883. His younger brother Ernst joined
him there in 1877. The two brothers and fellow classmate
Franz Matsch formed a partnership to work on public
commissions in 1883, carrying out numerous decorative
commissions, including paintings for the Burgtheater
and Kunsthistorische Museum in Vienna. During the
period when Klimt became interested in Symbolism and
Art Nouveau, he and 15 others resigned from the Viennese
Artist's Association and founded the Vienna Secession
(1897). Klimt was elected president and the group
secured its own exhibition space and published an
illustrated magazine. He was commissioned to paint
three allegorical panels representing Philosophy,
Medicine and Jurisprudence for the ceiling of the
Great Hall of the University of Vienna in 1894. Over
the course of 10 years the project he met criticism
and protest from the public, members of parliament
and press for what were deemed to be erotic and ugly
images. Meanwhile, he was awarded a gold medal for
Philosophy when it was exhibited at the Universal
Exposition in Paris. Klimt's Hope I (1903), in the
National Gallery of Canada collection, depicts a pregnant
woman, standing nude in profile. Behind her are despairing
figures and a skull suggesting death. There are small
decorative features throughout the work, including
flowers in the woman's hair and specks of gold and
linear designs in the background. The piece was intended
for display at the retrospective of his work at the
18th Exhibition of the Secession in 1903. However,
he withdrew it, due to impending controversy over
its explicit representation. During the First World
War Klimt was no longer taking public commissions,
and worked on portraits for private patrons of the
Vienna elite. He also continued to produce landscapes,
which he had begun at the time of the founding of
the Secession and his interest in modernism. Klimt
worked until his death shortly after a stroke, in
1918.
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No quadro "Judith I - 1901", Judite exibe
a cabeça de Holofernes e olha-nos provocadoramente.
Ela emana um enorme poder sensual e um esplendor erótico.
Holofernes, que era um general do exército
assírio no tempo de Nabucodonosor, cercou a
cidade de Bethulia, cortando-lhe o fornecimento de
água. Judite, uma jovem viúva decidida
a salvar a cidade, seduziu Holofernes e decapitou-o
enquanto este se encontrava ébrio. A decoração
dourada baseada em formas naturais é característica
do estilo da Sezession (Secessão), a versão
austríaca da Arte Nova, um movimento decorativo
de linhas estilizadas e sinuosas que revolucionaram
a arquitectura e o design ocidental, no final do século
XIX. Pintor essencialmente decorativo, Klimt foi o
principal artista deste movimento, que pretendia aumentar
a produção das artes e ofícios
na Austria, até ao nível dos restantes
países da Europa. A sua aproximação
ao Simbolismo e as suas tendências anti-realistas
eram consideradas extremamente radicais para a época.
Gustav Klimt nasceu em Viena em 1862 e morreu na mesma
cidade em 1918.