09/06/02

Gustav Klimt Landscapes, The Clark Art Institute, Williamstown

Gustav Klimt Landscapes
The Clark Art Institute, Williamstown
June 16 – September 2, 2002

The first exhibition devoted to Gustav Klimt's landscapes, which are virtually unknown outside of Austria, will be introduced to American audiences this summer, organized by the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute. The Clark is the only North American venue for Gustav Klimt Landscapes. The exhibition features the lush, colorful landscapes by the great Viennese artist, whose favorite subjects include the orchards, woods, gardens, and villas around the Attersee in western Austria. Many of the paintings in the exhibition are from private and European collections.

"Klimt was a landscape painter of exceptional daring, who built on the influence of Japanese art, the work of Van Gogh and Cézanne, Austrian landscape traditions, and his own Viennese modernism to create something entirely new and radical," said Richard Rand, senior curator at the Clark. "Gustav Klimt Landscapes features evocative paintings with brilliant colors and tapestry like effects by one of the great artists of the turn-of-the-century. The effect of these canvases is completely mesmerizing."

Gustav Klimt painted 55 landscapes between 1898 and his death in 1918. The artist spent many vacations in the region surrounding the Attersee, a lake near Salzburg. Like many affluent Viennese,  Gustav Klimt was drawn to the area's culture of relaxation and leisure, and this phenomenon known as "Sommerfrische" inspired his paintings. About 15 of the large, mosaic-like paintings, each more than three feet square, will be featured in the Clark exhibition.

Gustav Klimt's landscapes combine a decorative style influenced by Japanese art, with keen observation and delicate sensitivtity to atmosphere and space. After 1902, Gustav Klimt's landscapes reflect the strong influence of Pointillism and a daring approach to color. Paintings such as Roses Under Trees include scenes of sweeping, flowering trees created from single planes of fragmented brushstrokes. Later landscapes show his interest in the work of Van Gogh and Cézanne. A quiet, chapel-like installation at the Clark enhances the powerful experience of these works.

Born in 1862, Gustav Klimt dominated the art scene in Vienna from 1900 to 1918, the Vienna of Sigmund Freud and Gustav Mahler. While trained in the realistic classical style of painting, Gustav Klimt's art took a more modern direction and in 1897 he helped form the Association of Austrian Visual Artists, widely known as the Secession, which played a central role in the development of modernism in painting. He is perhaps best known for his lush, erotic female figures and the embracing couple in his most famous painting, The Kiss.

Gustav Klimt Landscapes has been organized by the Österreichische Galerie Belvedere, Vienna, and the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute. A fully illustrated catalogue will be published by Prestel in both German and English editions. Guest curator for the exhibition is Stephan Koja, curator of 19th-century painting at the Galerie Belvedere.

THE CLARK ART INSTITUTE
225 South Street, Williamstown, MA 01267
www.clarkart.edu