Many people know of the Impressionist movement in France, but not many are aware of the artistic spiral that it influences. Germany was heavily influenced by French art in the 19th century. Some of Germany’s most notable artists were inspired by the Impressionist movement but took it one step further in the expressionist and symbolist period. Gustav Klimt was one of the most well-known symbolist artists of the 19th century in Germany. Many know him from his painting “The Kiss.”
Klimt was from an area near Vienna, Germany. Throughout his life, he often struggled financially and lived in poverty. He developed his artistic skills in the Vienna School of Arts and Crafts. Here he was trained to be an architectural painter. This became the reason for his artistic success later on in his career. Along with other artists, he formed the Vienna Secession group of symbolist artists. This group did not favor a specific painting style or genre but rather promoted the combination of various styles. A couple years after the Secession group formed, Klimt was commissioned to paint three murals on the ceiling of the Great Hall at the University of Vienna. Klimt was known for creating paintings that used vibrant unnatural colors. He challenged traditional artists by taking a raw human experience and giving it added layers of emotion. He used a lot of traditional shapes, such as cubes and circles, creating a simplistic yet intense image. His work makes the audience question their emotions and view nature from a new perspective.
His three murals did just that. The murals featured bright yellow colors and various nude women with classical Greek and Roman components, each representing various societal advancements and struggles. Many viewed his murals as being inappropriate, political, and even religious. The sensual nature of his paintings was new territory for German art, and many found it to be too extreme for the public. This was his last commissioned project but led to his artistic fame.
Klimt was known for being intrinsically motivated. His main goal was to express his own emotions and feelings that he felt could only be expressed through art. His one true moment of extrinsic motivation was in his commissioned mural, but even then, there are still traces of his intrinsic motivation in his designs. Culturally, Klimt’s art was revolutionary. While Germany can be argued to be a Western country, the artistic culture of the region had traces of eastern cultural characteristics. While the general style of his work was thought to break from traditional art, which is a characteristic of Western creative culture, it still aligns more with Eastern creative culture. Eastern creative culture is known for having a reinterpretation of ideas. Klimt aspired to take concepts people were familiar with and reinvent them creatively; Like his murals, sometimes that involved classical figures. Most notably, he built off of German traditions. Klimt was featured in an exhibit for creating a visual representation of Beethoven’s 9th Symphony. It included light features and told a story of hardship and triumph. The frieze tells the story of a hero who defeats a monster and frees himself of his own constraint. In the end, he embraces his lover while surrounded by a choir, signifying the end of the Symphony where a choir being to sing. Klimt was able to take one form of art and make it accessible and relevant in a whole new way. Klimt continued to challenge artistic traditions and even went on to inspire musical composers, writers, and other painters to merge the arts and reinterpret older pieces and methods.
If interested, here is a 25-minute video of the Beethoven Frieze with Beethoven’s full 9th Symphony playing in the background following along:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R1KXqTj6vYI
https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-liverpool/exhibition/gustav-klimt-painting-design-and-modern-life-vienna-1900/gustav-0
https://www.gustav-klimt.com/Beethoven-Frieze.jsp
https://www.klimtgallery.org/biography.html