About Gustav Klimt:
Born on 14th July 1862, Gustav Klimt was the second of seven children. In 1876, Klimt was recognized as an exceptional talent and awarded a scholarship to the Kunstgewerbeschule des Österreichischen Museums. As a result, Klimt, alongside his brother Ernst and Franz Matsch, was commissioned in 1894 to decorate the ceiling of the Great Hall of the Vienna University with allegorical faculty paintings, Medicine, Philosophy, and Jurisprudence. Klimt ultimately rejected the university commission in 1905. The paintings were never installed at the university. In 1902, his Beethoven Frieze depicted the triumph of happiness over dark forces through the power of the arts. A pivotal moment in Klimt’s artistic evolution came in 1903 when he visited Ravenna. Inspired by Byzantine mosaics, he incorporated a rich, golden aesthetic into his paintings. Adele Bloch-Bauer I (1907), and The Kiss (1907) - hallmarks of what is now known as his Golden Style. It was also in 1907 that Klimt met the young Egon Schiele. Recognizing Schiele’s prodigious talent, Klimt encouraged him but advised against formal
study under him, believing Schiele’s raw genius needed no intervention. By 1909 Klimt increasingly felt disconnected from the modernist movement and withdrew from public life. He spent long periods painting landscapes around the Attersee and creating intimate portraits. In his final years, Klimt’s artistic output remained prolific, yet with his withdrawal from his public life came an abandonment of the grand allegorical works. In 1917, Klimt was finally nominated for an honorary professorship at the Vienna Academy - a long-overdue recognition. Upon returning from a trip to Romania in early 1918, Klimt suffered a stroke. He died, aged 56, in Vienna on 6th February 1918, leaving behind an extraordinary body of work, some of which would remain unfinished but nonetheless influential.
Today, Klimt is celebrated as a visionary who bridged the gap between tradition and modernity. Once dismissed as decorative and controversial, his art now stands among the most revered and valuable in the world.