Bangkok Post

Vienna museum's 'Stairway To Klimt' takes visitors to new heights

- PHILIPPE SCHWAB

Visitors to Vienna’s art history museum on Monday enjoyed a closer look at 13 of Gustav Klimt’s unsung masterpiec­es thanks to a walkway erected over a monumental central stairway.

The sprawling Kunsthisto­risches Museum (KHM), opened in 1891 under Emperor Franz-Joseph, houses one of Europe’s most important art collection­s while also showcasing interior design by the cream of Vienna’s artists and sculptors.

Among those commission­ed to decorate the building was Klimt, then 28 and considered a rising star of the Austrian neoclassic­al school.

But until now the museum’s 1.4 million annual visitors could only admire the paintings from afar.

The eye-level experience is well worth the climb up the “Stairway To Klimt”, as the museum has dubbed the new installati­on, in a nod to the song by the legendary band Led Zeppelin.

Paying homage to the Venetian, Roman and Florentine traditions of the Quattrocen­to, as well as to Egyptian art, the superbly preserved works are testament to the young Klimt’s artistic maturity and hint at the future course of the Vienna Secession.

They show his use of gilding, full-length portraits, monumental motifs inspired by Japanese prints and above all a delicate sensuality.

“Even though still attached to historicis­m, the work already shows the beginnings of Modernism,” said Daniel Uchtmann, art historian at the KHM.

Of particular note among the works is of a nude Egyptian-inspired goddess depicted in a provocativ­e pose.

“Even though it didn’t cause any particular scandal, this sort of representa­tion was quite daring in the context of a public building,” Uchtmann said.

Klimt had already been commission­ed for several public projects with his brother Ernst, with whom he founded a company in 1883 for this purpose, the Kuenstler- Compagnie.

He continued pushing artistic boundaries before breaking free of the Associatio­n of Austrian Artists and helping to found the Vienna Secession movement.

In 1905 Klimt found himself forced to buy back three canvases from the University of Vienna after outrage sparked by their “provocativ­e” nature.

The Stairway To Klimt is part of dozens of exhibition­s being held in Austria this year to mark the centenary of Klimt’s untimely death on Feb 6, 1918, as well as to honour three other major figures of Viennese modernism, Egon Schiele, Koloman Moser and Otto Wagner. The stairway will stay in place until Sept 2.

 ??  ?? Visitors stand on a suspended bridge, 12m above ground, to take a closer look to paintings by Austrian painter Gustav Klimt at the Kunsthisto­risches Museum in Vienna.
Visitors stand on a suspended bridge, 12m above ground, to take a closer look to paintings by Austrian painter Gustav Klimt at the Kunsthisto­risches Museum in Vienna.

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