Large Framed "Avenue of Schloss Kammer Park" by Gustav Klimt


Item Number: 443

Time Left: CLOSED

Value: $400

Online Close: Nov 4, 2019 9:00 PM EST

Bid History: 1 bid - Item Sold!


Description

This large-scale framed Gustav Klimt print will become a focal point in your home, office or business. Stunning!


Avenue of Schloss Kammer Park, 1912 by Gustav Klimt


35" x 35" framed


Gustav Klimt (July 14, 1862 - February 6, 1918) was an Austrian Symbolist painter and one of the most prominent members of the Vienna Art Nouveau (Vienna Secession) movement. His major works include paintings, murals, sketches, and other art objects, many of which are on display in the Vienna Secession gallery.


While Klimt's first landscapes date from the early 1880s, it was not until the late 1890s that he turned consistently to landscape subjects, during summer vacations spent in the picturesque Salzkammergut, outside the city of Salzburg. Landscape painting enabled him to experiment, free from the pressure of commissioned work and the distractions of the metropolis. After the early 1900s, when Klimt eschewed large public commissions and became more dependent upon selling his work, a ready supply of new landscapes proved useful.


Klimt's landscapes are now a highly admired aspect of his oeuvre. A particular feature of the works is their standard size and square format, a device Klimt used with their exhibition in mind. The uniformity of his landscapes in this one respect highlights their diversity in many others. Throughout, it is possible to point to corresponding shifts in Klimt's approach to the portraits and allegories on which he worked in Vienna. Many unfinished landscapes were taken back to his Vienna studio for completion.


Klimt's landscapes express his wider concerns with biological growth and the cycle of life. Their dazzling decorative surfaces and abstracted motifs align him with emergent modernist tendencies.


Avenue of Schloss Kammer Park recalls the symbiosis of naturalism and ornament in the contemporary work of Egon Schiele.

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