The
Austrian painter Gustav Klimt (1862-1918) was the
quintessential exponent of Art Nouveau. Born and raised
in Vienna, he attended the School of Applied Arts on a
scholarship and spent the early part of his career as a
decorative muralist, completing commissions in newly
erected public buildings throughout the city.
In 1897 he co-founded the Secession, a group of artists
rebelling against the conventional forces that dominated
Viennese art circles of the time. The Secessionists
launched a far-reaching program of exhibitions and
publications, and Klimt became caught in a firestorm of
controversy over his allegorical paintings that were
considered anathema by his critics.
Factionalism within the group led him to leave the
Secession in 1905, and Klimt achieved his greatest fame
as a portrait and landscape painter of both erotic and
exotic sensibility.
The Kiss, Klimt's most popular painting even in his day,
is a totemic monument to love and one of the artist's
most transcendent images.
(c)1995 Graphique de France |