OTTAWA.- The National Gallery of Canada offers a rare opportunity to view three paintings by Gustav Klimt (1862-1918), one of the greatest painters of the twentieth century, owing to a long term loan from a private collection. Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer (1914-16), a commanding example of Klimts trademark female portraiture, and Forest Slope in Unterach on the Attersee (1916), a lush example of Klimts lesser-known, yet equally impressive landscape paintings, are now on view in the European galleries, along with Hope I (1903), which the Gallery purchased in 1970. Hope 1 is the only painting by Klimt in a Canadian public collection.
This long-term display is an unprecedented opportunity to see three exceptional Klimt paintings together in Canada, said NGC Deputy Director and Chief Curator Paul Lang. It enables the Gallery to offer a complete survey of the artists work spanning two decades of his career. A truly transformative loan, these works will allow our visitors to experience the full visual splendor of one of the most inventive artists of his day.
The most renowned member of the fin-de-siècle Art Nouveau movement known as the Vienna Secession, Gustav Klimt is celebrated for his painterly expressiveness and extravagant devotion to colour and surface materiality. He sought to break with the past and propose a new style and experimental mode of expression commensurate with the realities of modern life.
Commissioned in 1914 by the artists most important patrons, the wealthy Viennese couple August and Szerena Lederer, Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer (1914-16) portrays their twenty-year-old daughter. Elisabeth Lederer stands life-sized, her expression one of elegant self-confidence and youthful freshness. Klimt has transformed her cloak into a dazzling, quasi-abstract array of ornamentation and placed her on a brightly-coloured carpet that flattens the space while simultaneously drawing the woman out toward the viewer, says Curatorial Assistant and Provenance Researcher Kirsten Appleyard. Surrounding her is an assortment of Chinese figures, a nod to the Lederers reputation as erudite collectors and a testament to the artists own connoisseurship of Asian art. While earlier portraits by the artist seduce via the rich physicality of their ornamentoften conveyed in a gold-encrusted mosaic stylehere Klimt relies on exotic marvels to evoke curiosity and command attention.
While the artist is primarily celebrated for his portraits and allegories, explains Appleyard, his landscapes comprise almost one half of his oeuvre from the last two decades of his life. Indeed, Klimt devoted himself intensely to this genre, retreating every summer to the countryside around Lake Attersee in Upper Austria to paint and reflect.
Like the majority of Klimt's landscapes, Forest Slope in Unterach on the Attersee (1916) follows a square format achieved through the use of optical devices such as a telescope or opera glasses. In this carefully crafted two-dimensional painting, planes are artificially stacked one upon the other, with powerful strokes of related colours creating an overall mood of meditative calm, says Appleyard. Klimts landscape is withdrawn and timelessa tranquil daydream. While echoes of Cézannes ordered structures and Van Goghs expressive handling can be felt, it is nevertheless a work of exceptional daring and originality, she adds.