Gustav Klimt
Austrian, 1862–1918Overview
Gustav Klimt (1862-1918) was an Austrian painter and one of the most influential figures of late nineteenth and early twentieth-century European art. Born in Baumgarten near Vienna, he trained at the Vienna School of Applied Arts (Kunstgewerbeschule), where he received a rigorous classical and decorative arts education. He began his career producing architectural decorations and murals in the historicist style, including ceiling paintings for the Burgtheater and the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, and earned early official recognition through these commissions.
In 1897, Klimt broke with the conservative artistic establishment to co-found the Vienna Secession, a movement of artists committed to renewing the visual arts in Austria and engaging with the broader currents of European modernism. As the Secession's first president, he became the public face of a new direction in Austrian art, embracing Symbolism, Art Nouveau, and a richly decorative sensibility deeply informed by his exposure to Byzantine mosaics in Ravenna. The encounter inspired his celebrated "Golden Phase," in which gold leaf, intricate patterning, and erotic intensity combined in masterpieces such as The Kiss, Judith and the Head of Holofernes, and the portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I, sometimes called the "Golden Adele."
Throughout his career, Klimt remained a deeply private figure, working steadily from his Vienna studio and producing portraits of the city's leading patrons alongside allegorical and landscape pictures. His influence extended directly to the next generation of Austrian artists, particularly Egon Schiele and Oskar Kokoschka, and his work continues to stand as one of the central achievements of European modernism.
"Whoever wants to know something about me—as an artist alone which is significant—they should look attentively at my pictures and there seek to recognize what I am and what I want.
—Gustav Klimt