Gustav Klimt:
Picture "Field with Poppies" (1905), framed
Proportional view
Picture "Field with Poppies" (1905), framed
Gustav Klimt:
Picture "Field with Poppies" (1905), framed

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limited, 499 copies | reproduction, Giclée print on canvas | on stretcher frame | framed | size 65 x 65 cm

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Product no. IN-694620.R1

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Picture "Field with Poppies" (1905), framed
Gustav Klimt: Picture "Field with Poppies" (1905), framed

Detailed description

Picture "Field with Poppies" (1905), framed

Klimt designed his pictures mainly as allegories of life. The wild red poppy symbolises passion, happiness and the fragility of life and love.
Klimt's colourful and detailed depiction of an early summer meadow shows the great portraitist as the first-rate depictor of nature. And while in many of his portrait paintings, the richness of colour and obsession with detail appear as lavish decoration, with this painting, Klimt focuses his attention on the smallest details in the service of a sprouting nature that needs no further decoration.
Original: Oil on canvas, Österreichische Galerie Belvedere, Vienna.

High-quality reproduction using the Fine Art Giclée process, worked by hand on canvas and stretched on a stretcher frame. Limited edition of 499 copies. In handmade black and gold gallery frame. Size 65 x 65 cm.

Portrait of the artist Gustav Klimt

About Gustav Klimt

1862-1918, Austrian painter, a famous representative of Viennese Art Nouveau

Gustav Klimt (1862-1918) was already a renowned artist, influencing the Art Nouveau style of Vienna's famous Ringstrasse with his murals and co-founding the Vienna Secession, when he created his "Golden Style". Inspired by the Byzantine mosaics, he inserted ornamental colour surfaces into a golden bed just like encased gemstones. With his visual art, Klimt describes the path of life of human beings who, negatively influenced by instincts, find their redemption in the kiss. The depictions of the body convey a subtle eroticism, although their figures dissolve into ornamental and geometric colour surfaces. He utilized this method not only for his depictions of couples but also for his portraits of rich women and landscape paintings. This two-dimensional style is today the epitome of Klimt's intensely coloured art, which, however, only characterises his work from 1905 onwards.

Klimt was not only adept at gold and opulence but was also a brilliant draughtsman. He produced numerous drawings in the course of his life. Mostly as preliminary studies for larger works.

As a son of an engraver, Klimt learned his craft at Vienna‘s School of Applied Arts. While still seeking to find his own artistic style, his early work is based on historicism especially influenced by Hans Makart, the artist Prince of the Habsburg monarchy in the late 19th century. Together with his brother Ernst and Franz Matsch, the three young painters formed an artistic community and received numerous commissions to design new buildings on Vienna's Ringstrasse. The staircases of Vienna's Burgtheater or the Museum of Fine Arts bear witness to the historicist style of this collaborative team.

In the late 1890s, like so many young and open-minded artists of the fin de siècle, Gustav Klimt abandoned the academic tradition. In 1897, together with other artists, he founded the "Wiener Secession", which he presided over as president until his resignation in 1905. To this day, the Secession's exhibition building remains a place and temple for new young art.

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