Studie für "Unkeuschhiet" im Beethovenfries
Gustav Klimt
1901
- Aufgestützt liegender Akt
ehemalige:r Besitzer:in1903-1915 Carl Reininghaus (Graz 1857 - 1929 Wien)ehemalige:r Besitzer:inab 1915 August Lederer (Böhmisch-Leipa 1857 - 1936 Wien)ehemalige:r Besitzer:in Erich Lederer (Wien 1896 - 1985 Genf)ehemalige:r Besitzer:inab 1981 Privatbesitz Auktion17.6.2008 Auktionshaus im Kinsky [90000](Wien)ehemalige:r Besitzer:in2008-2009 Besitzer:in unbekannt ehemalige:r Besitzer:inab 2009 Le Claire Kunst (Hamburg)ehemalige:r Besitzer:in2012-2019 Kunsthandel Wienerroither & Kohlbacher (gegründet 1993 in Wien)Besitzer:inab 2019 Privatsammlung , USA
Werkverzeichnis
1 Die Studien, die das Modell sitzend wiedergeben: Strobl, Bd. 1, 1980, Nrn. 812-814.
2 Vgl. Marian Bisanz-Prakken, in: Ausstellungskatalog, Toorop / Klimt. Toorop in Wenen. Inspiratie voor Klimt, Haags Gemeentmuseum 2006/07, SS. 163-179; – dieselbe, Der Beethovenfries und Klimts ‚Gabe der Empfänglichkeit, in: Alfred Weidinger, op. cit., SS. 93-118, mit weiterführender Literatur.
Within this important group of drawings are to be found examples ranging from sheets that bear the first hints of the approaching “sacred spring” of the Viennese Secession to those that mark the end of the Utopia of an ideal merging of art and life. Like no other artist, Gustav Klimt infused Viennese Modernism with the strong sense of an ideal through his own allegorical compositions, as demonstrated by the figural studies seen here. Characteristic of Viennese Symbolism around 1896 is the mysterious radiance of the woman shown playing a hand-plucked stringed instrument [Strobl 285]: a study for an unrealised Allegory of Sacred and Profane Music. Deriving from the early period of the Secession – on its founding, in 1897, Gustav Klimt was elected its President – is the remarkable drawing of a nude shown floating in mid-air [Strobl 3366]: a study for the figure who, in the large allegorical composition Medicine (a segment of the grand ceiling painted for Vienna University), embodies life at its most joyfully fruitful, in contrast to the great mass of “suffering” humanity. An equally positive air attends the small, naked, frontally posed figure found in Klimt’s provocative painting Pallas Athene, a study for which is shown here]. This figure was in turn to serve as the starting point for the red-haired nude in Klimt’s painting of 1899, Nuda Veritas, his most programmatic affirmation of the truth of art. Similarly infused with an element of the programmatic are the blue crayon sketches for an unrealised depiction of Nike and, on the same sheet, two drawings of a frontally viewed female head [Strobl 711]. In contrast, the drawing of a young woman seated and bending slightly forward [Strobl 298] is imbued with an air of tender intimacy: it is a study for the figure at the left of the allegorical composition Music II, commissioned by Nikolaus Dumba for the music salon of his house in Vienna. Music was also one of the chief themes of Klimt’s celebrated Beethoven Frieze: an allegory of Struggle and Triumph, of Desire and Redemption, created in 1901 as a monumental form of decoration integral to the Viennese Secession’s Beethoven Exhibition of the following year. Klimt’s studies for the numerous figures featured in this work are among the pinnacles of his mastery of line. While "Lust" [Strobl 815] is characterised through the sensually flowing contours of her voluptuous body, the taut outlines, rigorous profile presentation and inclined head of "Poetry" [Strobl 830] attest spiritual concentration. Klimt’s systematic and subtly differentiating use of line is also to be found in his studies for the third of his paintings for Vienna University, Jurisprudence. Here, the figures of the Judge and of "Justice" [Strobl 3479a, Strobl 3484] evince a somewhat brittle linearity, while that of "Truth" [Strobl 924] is thrown into relief through its buoyant contours.
The paintings Hope I and Hope II address in a pessimistic spirit the mystery attending the emergence of new life; but the related studies of pregnant women evince a positive and meditative mood. In that made in preparation for Hope I [Strobl 988] Klimt employs a subtle linearity to emphasize the hands of the expectant mother, held protectively over her belly. The model for Hope II retains a more plainly naturalistic character. In the embracing lovers intended for a frieze commissioned for the Palais Stoclet in Brussels [Strobl 3616] Klimt, for the last time, evokes the allegory of an “ideal realm” (earlier found in the Beethoven Frieze), in which man and woman are truly united in a radiant ambience. Here, at the highpoint of his “golden style”, Klimt as a draughtsman knew better than ever how to re-animate the polarity of the sexes in a manner no less sensual than spiritual.
Translation: Elizabeth Clegg, London
The study of the reclining nude propped up on one elbow was made for the figure of Lust, whose body in the painted version of the composition was to be largely concealed by those of her companions, Lewdness and Excess. In the Frieze itself all that remains visible is her face: smiling inwardly as if absorbed in her own thoughts, with closed eyes and enveloping gold-blond hair. Among the heretofore identified drawings of the figure of Lust, who in the Frieze is shown sitting upright, this horizontally arranged pose is an exception. Employing outlines that are energetic and, at the same time, sensitive, Klimt plots the rounded body forms of the plump model, who with her smiling, dreamy expression appears fully self-absorbed. Among the Hostile Powers she represents, in contrast to the bewitching Gorgons, an unaggressive pure sensuality. The symbolism of the linearly stylised rendering of the hair, which attests to the influence of the Dutch Symbolist Jan Toorop, plays an overwhelming role in the Beethoven Frieze and also constitutes the particular charm of this drawing.
Translation: Elizabeth Clegg, London
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Information about this work may change as the result of ongoing research.