Left: Gustav Klimt in his studio garden. Circa 1912-14. Photograph.
Right: Poster for the First Secession Exhibition. 1898. Private collection.
Face Time
Self and Identity in Expressionist Portraiture
April 9, 2013 - June 28, 2013
Recent Acquisitions
(And Some Thoughts on the Current Art Market)
July 17, 2012 - October 13, 2012
The Lady and the Tramp
Images of Women in Austrian and German Art
October 11, 2011 - December 30, 2011
Recent Acquisitions
(And Some Thoughts on the Current Art Market)
July 5, 2011 - September 30, 2011
Recent Acquisitions
(And Some Thoughts on the Current Art Market)
July 13, 2010 - October 1, 2010
Recent Acquisitions
(And Some Thoughts on the Current Art Market)
June 24, 2008 - September 26, 2008
Transforming Reality
Pattern and Design in Modern and Self-Taught Art
January 15, 2008 - March 8, 2008
Recent Acquisitions
(And Some Thoughts on the Current Art Market)
June 5, 2007 - September 28, 2007
Who Paid the Piper?
The Art of Patronage in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna
March 8, 2007 - May 26, 2007
More Than Coffee was Served
Café Culture in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna and Weimar Germany
September 19, 2006 - November 25, 2006
Recent Acquisitions
(And Some Thoughts on the Current Art Market)
June 6, 2006 - September 8, 2006
* Coming of Age
Egon Schiele and the Modernist Culture of Youth
November 15, 2005 - January 7, 2006
Recent Acquisitions
And Some Thoughts on the Current Art Market
June 7, 2005 - September 9, 2005
Every Picture Tells a Story
The Narrative Impulse in Modern and Contemporary Art
April 5, 2005 - May 27, 2005
65th Anniversary Exhibition, Part I
Austrian and German Expressionism
October 28, 2004 - January 8, 2005
Recent Acquisitions
(And Some Thoughts on the Current Art Market)
June 24, 2003 - September 12, 2003
In Search of the "Total Artwork"
Viennese Art and Design 1897–1932
April 8, 2003 - June 14, 2003
Recent Acquisitions
(And Some Thoughts on the Current Art Market)
June 25, 2002 - September 20, 2002
Gustav Klimt/Egon Schiele/Oskar Kokoscha
From Art Nouveau to Expressionism
November 23, 2001 - January 5, 2002
Recent Acquisitions (And Some Thoughts on the Current Art Market)
June 26, 2001 - September 7, 2001
From Façade to Psyche
Turn-of-the-Century Portraiture in Austria & Germany
March 28, 2000 - June 10, 2000
Saved From Europe
In Commemoration of the 60th Anniversary of the Galerie St. Etienne
November 6, 1999 - January 8, 2000
Recent Acquisitions
(And Some Thoughts About Looted Art)
June 9, 1998 - September 11, 1998
Taboo
Repression and Revolt in Modern Art
March 26, 1998 - May 30, 1998
Recent Acquisitions
A Question of Quality
June 10, 1997 - September 5, 1997
The Viennese Line
Art and Design Circa 1900
November 18, 1996 - January 4, 1997
Breaking All The Rules
Art in Transition
June 11, 1996 - September 6, 1996
The Fractured Form
Expressionism and the Human Body
November 15, 1995 - January 6, 1996
Recent Acquisitions
June 20, 1995 - September 8, 1995
On the Brink 1900-2000
The Turning of Two Centuries
March 28, 1995 - May 26, 1995
55th Anniversary Exhibition in Memory of Otto Kallir
June 7, 1994 - September 2, 1994
Symbolism and the Austrian Avant Garde
Klimt, Schiele and their Contemporaries
November 16, 1993 - January 8, 1994
Recent Acquisitions
June 8, 1993 - September 3, 1993
Naive Visions/Art Nouveau and Expressionism/Sue Coe: The Road to the White House
May 19, 1992 - September 4, 1992
Scandal, Outrage, Censorship
Controversy in Modern Art
January 21, 1992 - March 7, 1992
Viennese Graphic Design
From Secession to Expressionism
November 19, 1991 - January 11, 1992
Recent Acquisitions
Themes and Variations
May 14, 1991 - August 16, 1991
Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele, Oskar Kokoschka
Watercolors, drawings and prints
January 22, 1991 - March 2, 1991
Recent Acquisitions
June 12, 1990 - August 31, 1990
The Narrative in Art
January 23, 1990 - March 17, 1990
Galerie St. Etienne
A History in Documents and Pictures
June 20, 1989 - September 8, 1989
* Gustav Klimt
Paintings and Drawings
April 11, 1989 - June 10, 1989
Recent Acquisitions and Works From the Collection
June 14, 1988 - September 16, 1988
From Art Nouveau to Expressionism
April 12, 1988 - May 27, 1988
Recent Acquisitions and Works From the Collection
April 7, 1987 - October 31, 1987
Oskar Kokoschka and His Time
November 25, 1986 - January 31, 1987
Viennese Design and Wiener Werkstätte
September 23, 1986 - November 8, 1986
Gustav Klimt/Egon Schiele/Oskar Kokoschka
Watercolors, Drawings and Prints
May 27, 1986 - September 13, 1986
The Art of Giving
December 3, 1985 - January 18, 1986
Expressionists on Paper
October 8, 1985 - November 23, 1985
European and American Landscapes
June 4, 1985 - September 13, 1985
Arnold Schoenberg's Vienna
November 13, 1984 - January 5, 1985
* Gustav Klimt
Drawings and Selected Paintings
September 20, 1983 - November 5, 1983
Early and Late
Drawings, Paintings & Prints from Academicism to Expressionism
June 1, 1983 - September 2, 1983
Aspects of Modernism
June 1, 1982 - September 3, 1982
The Human Perspective
Recent Acquisitions
March 16, 1982 - May 15, 1982
Austria's Expressionism
April 21, 1981 - May 30, 1981
Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele
November 12, 1980 - December 27, 1980
* Gustav Klimt
March 20, 1970
Austrian Art of the 20th Century
March 21, 1969
* Gustav Klimt
February 4, 1967
The Wiener Werkstätte
November 16, 1966
25th Anniversary Exhibition
Part I
October 17, 1964
Austrian Expressionists
January 6, 1964
Group Show
October 15, 1962
Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele, Oskar Kokoschka and Alfred Kubin
March 14, 1961
Watercolors and Drawings by Austrian Artists from the Dial Collection
May 2, 1960
European and American Expressionists
September 22, 1959
* Gustav Klimt
April 1, 1959
Austrian Art of the 19th Century
From Wadlmüller to Klimt
April 1, 1950
Small, Good Art Works from the 19th and 20th Centuries
January 27, 1949
Franz Barwig the Elder, Franz Barwig the Younger and Gustav Klimt
March 12, 1948
Gustav Klimt, Oskar Kokoschka and Egon Schiele
September 15, 1945
Saved from Europe
Masterpieces of European Art
July 1, 1940
Group Exhibition
May 1, 1939
Austrian Art
February 1, 1939
Important Paintings
November 29, 1937
Anton Faistauer, Gustav Klimt, Oskar Kokoschka and Egon Schiele
June 1, 1933
Gustav Klimt and Bruno Lauterbach
March 29, 1928
* Gustav Klimt
May 20, 1926
GUSTAV KLIMT
Paintings and Drawings
Klimt, Gustav
Of the many Austrian artists represented by the Galerie St. Etienne, Gustav Klimt (1862-1918) in some ways best epitomizes the curious downs and ups of our fifty years in the United States. Certainly he is today the most widely known artist of Vienna's fin-de-siècle cultural renaissance--more widely known, even, than Oskar Kokoschka and Egon Schiele, his Expressionist followers. Yet for many years it seemed that Klimt would never find international recognition. Though his controversial painting philosophy received the gold medal at the Paris World's Fair in 1900, success abroad--particularly in neighboring Germany--eluded him all his life. After his death, his contributions were superseded by the seemingly more avant-garde Expressionist movement and its various offshoots. Klimt faded quickly into the historical past, and his emergence was in no way encouraged by the rarity of his paintings outside Austria.
Whereas the Galerie St. Etienne mounted the first American showings of work by Kokoschka and Schiele soon after its founding in 1939, only in 1959 could it muster enough representative pictures for the first U.S. Klimt exhibition. From then on, however, things began rapidly to improve. Already in 1956, Harvard had acquired its Klimt from the Galerie St. Etienne (the first American museum to do so), and in 1957 the Museum of Modern Art followed suit. The 1965 Gustav Klimt/Egon Schiele exhibition at the Guggenheim Museum was the first to present the artist's work on a large scale, and a subsequent proliferation of Klimt monographs introduced him to an even broader audience. The psychedelic movement of the 1960s, which had a superficial affinity to Klimt's densely packed pictorial surfaces, helped plaster countless college dormitories with poster reproductions of his work. Suddenly, a Klimt "boom" was underway, and his subtle blend of the sinister and the romantic continues to exert a strong emotional pull on many who, knowing little of the artist or his background, are nonetheless seduced by his sumptuous gold and silver canvases.
Klimt regained his former position as modern Vienna's leading painter not merely because of a passing compatibility with the contemporary mindset, but because of the enduring validity of his artistic vision. This would-be rebel--founding president of the Vienna Secession in 1897--in fact got his start as a conventional muralist, and his work serves as a major bridge between the nineteenth century and the twentieth. Even after he ceased to receive mural commissions, his message, as expressed in countless allegories, remained essentially public. Klimt's lingering desire to comment on the meaning of life, to unmask its morbid and libidinous undercurrents, conflicted with his mid-career association with the Wiener Werkstätte design collective, founded in 1903. The benign decorative concerns of his Werkstätte assignments (and of his contemporaneous "golden" paintings) seemed at odds with his more profound philosophical leanings. A related contradiction developed between the artist's steadfast dependency on realistic subject matter, and a tendency toward abstraction derived from the Werkstätte's influence. Thus it happened that the two dominant threads of the nascent modernist movement--Expressionism and abstraction--became interwoven throughout his oeuvre. Such ambiguity usually implies weakness, but in Klimt's case the result was just the opposite. Rather than succumbing to a single doctrinaire approach, Klimt to the end of his days remained opened to challenge and experimentation, and his work is alive with the energy of suggested possibilities.
The present exhibition offers an opportunity to examine, on a scale seldom possible in the United States, many of the phases and byways of Gustav Klimt's complex development. The earliest paintings in the show reveal his conventional academic roots, but at the same time they also demonstrate the concern with two-dimensional pattern that was to form the bulwark of the "golden" period. The famous Pallas Athena--avenging angel and offical protectress of the Secession--is among the highlights of the exhibition, and one of the artist's first "gold" paintings. The concerns of the golden period (or, as Klimt's contemporaries called it, his "mosaic style") are perhaps even more clearly evident in the artist's landscapes, wherein the obsession with juxtaposing little "chips" of color in an edge-to-edge pattern most blatantly verges on pure abstraction. Klimt's radical proclivities are also accentuated in his drawings, which progress from a staid academicism to total freedom and spontaneity.
As a supplement to Klimt's artwork, we are delighted to present--for the first time ever outside Austria--a portion of the estate of Emilie Flöge, Klimt's lifelong companion and (according to some) lover. Flöge, a dress designer whose fashionable shop on Vienna's Mariahilferstrasse was designed by the Wiener Werkstätte, very naturally owned an important collection of Werkstätte objects. She also had something of a collaborative relationship with Klimt, who also dabbled in fashion design. Klimt's floor-length caftans are almost legendary, and his spectacular gold-embroidered gown is one of the centerpieces of the Flöge estate.
50th Anniversary Committee
Dr. Hubert Adolph, DIRECTOR, ÖSTERREICHISCHE GALERIE
Leon A. Arkus, DIRECTOR EMERITUS, CARNEGIE MUSEUM OF ART
Dr. Robert Bishop, DIRECTOR, MUSEUM OF AMERICAN FOLK ART
Dr. Jutta Bohnke-Kollwitz
The Honorable Leopold Bill von Bredow, CONSUL GENERAL OF THE
FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY
Prof. Alessandra Comini, SOUTHERN METHODIST UNIVERSITY
Dr. Günter Düriegl, DIRECTOR, HISTORISCHES MUSEUM DER STADT WIEN
Lillian Gish
Paul Gottlieb, PRESIDENT, HARRY N. ABRAMS, INC.
His Excellency Friedrich Hoess, AMBASSADOR OF AUSTRIA TO THE U.S.A.
Prof. Arne Kollwitz
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard A. Lauder
Ambassador Ronald S. Lauder
Gertrud Mellon
Thomas M. Messer, DIRECTOR EMERITUS, SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM
Dr. Konrad Oberhuber, DIRECTOR, GRAPHISCHE SAMMLUNG ALBERTINA
Mrs. John Alexander Pope
Prof. Carl E. Schorske, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
Dr. Richard A. Simms
The Honorable Wolfgang Steininger, CONSUL GENERAL OF AUSTRIA
Dr. Alice Strobl, VICE DIRECTOR EMERITUS, GRAPHISCHE SAMMLUNG ALBERTINA
Dr. Wolfgang Waldner, DIRECTOR, AUSTRIAN INSTITUTE