Award-Winning "Lady in Gold" Signed Book and Klimt Inspired Hand-Painted Silk Scarf


Item Number: 275

Time Left: CLOSED

Value: $168

Online Close: Feb 8, 2014 7:45 PM PST

Bid History: 4 bids - Item Sold!


Description

In this award-winning account that is admired by history and art history lovers alike, reporter Anne-Marie O’Connor uses the iconic Gustav Klimt gold portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer to engage us in the exciting cultural life of fin-de-siècle Vienna, where wealthy Jewish patrons supported the work of ground-breaking artists, lived in grand homes on the famous Ringstrasse, and thought life was good and they were valued as Austrians. With O’Connor’s background in art and her skills of investigative reporting, we come to know the people who turn the art world upside down during the last years of the Empire. Klimt, rock star artist of his era, is in great demand. Her family treasured his portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer, and the Austrians came to regard it as their Mona Lisa. Adele Bloch-Bauer, as O’Connor explains, was different. This wealthy Jewish woman hosted “Red Saturdays” at home, salons in which she voiced her opinions on the issues of the day, eager to implement reforms to improve workers’ lives. O’Connor characterizes her as “an unfinished woman,” for she died at 43. Wishing to immortalize Klimt, she directed that the portraits and landscapes that she and her husband had in their home be given to the Austrian Gallery. But after Adele died, life changed for Jews in Vienna: in 1938, the Anschluss made Austria part of Nazi Germany. Hitler’s henchmen commandeered Adele’s home and helped themselves to paintings and other works of art. Her family survived, barely. When the war ended, Austria kept the Klimts. When the battle to recover the Klimt portrait resumed in Los Angles in the 1990s, O’Connor interviewed Maria Altmann, niece of Adele Bloch-Bauer, who spearheaded the family’s legal case. Working with Altmann was attorney Randol Schoenberg, grandson of the famed composer and passionate advocate in the battle to recover the painting. Listen to this interview for further details of The Lady in Gold and read the book to learn more.


 

Special Instructions

About the scarf:


Design & Collection: This scarf recreates one of Gustav Klimt's masterpieces "Adele Bloch-Bauer I". Dahlia is the first to convert famous paintings into daily wear and has developed an extensive Art Painted Luxury Silk Scarf Collection with about 40+ designs.




  • Material: 100% luxurious 12-momme Charmeuse Silk. Charmeuse is a more expensive variety within silk, ranging from 5-momme to 12-momme in thickness. The thicker, the more expensive.

  • Dahlia use high quality dyes to create vibrant and durable prints.

  • Touch & Feel: Silky soft & drapes gracefully. Has a lustrous silky surface on one side with a flattened crepe on the back side.

  • Occasions: suitable for all formal, casual, and evening events all year long. Can be worn around your neck, head, waist, or hair as well as on a hat or handbag, etc.

  • Dimension: 16" W x 62" L. It's not just a scarf but also an art piece. Frame it and decorate your home!




Donated by

The Justiana Family
The Chaltiel Family