The landscapes he painted during the many summer holidays he spent on Attersee show that Gustav Klimt was in equal measure receptive to contemporary trends and deeply rooted in the tradition of Austrian landscape painting.
Lake Attersee, Photo: ANTO/Weinhäupl
Beginning in 1900
Gustav Klimt spent nearly every summer on
Lake Attersee, in the Salzkammergut lake region, to which he was introduced by
Emilie Flöge. Klimt was an indefatigable worker even during his holidays, rising early and retiring to bed early. But despite the fact that he invariably wore his blue painter's smock, photographs often show him in jovial social situations. He enjoyed rowing "to wake up the muscles a bit", as he said, went swimming "with great caution", and always had his sketchbooks with him when he went for walks. Klimt also became one of the first fashion photographers, taking pictures of Emilie Flöge in ten of the outfits she created.
It was during these summer stays on
Attersee that Klimt worked on his
landscapes, which account for one quarter of all his paintings. For these works the artist chose simple motifs: gardens, meadows with fruit trees, farmhouses surrounded by lush vegetation, and details of the lake and its shoreline. Klimt always painted outdoors, but he made use of an unusual technique that sheds light on some of the peculiarities of his landscapes. These pictures are not panoramas, but rather capture unusual details of the shoreline as viewed from an elevated position or from the water surface. These curious perspectives can be attributed to the so-called "viewfinder" he used, initially a simple piece of cardboard with a hole cut out of it, and later an ivory plate or an opera glass. Klimt's landscape paintings also betray the
influence of the Impressionists and the paintings of van Gogh, and frequently he achieves a pointillist effect as well. This, however, is not caused by the breaking down of the picture into bits of colour, but is rather the result of the juxtaposition of the individual objects, represented as blocks of colour, and by the general absence of the illusion of depth. This creates pictures that are free of tension, conveying a meditative tranquillity in which time seems to be standing still. There is no place for humans here. But animals, with the exception of chickens, are absent as well. In his selection of simple motifs, in which painterly considerations have priority over the subject, and whose absence of drama invites contemplation, Klimt - despite his adoption of contemporary influences - is firmly rooted in the tradition of Austrian landscape painting.
Retracing the Footsteps of Klimt on Attersee - By Water and on LandThree easy walks, each lasting from one to two hours.
Departure points/destinations: Seewalchen, Litzlberg, Weissenbach, and Kammer-Schörfling am Attersee
Ferienregion Attersee4864 Attersee
Tel.:
+43 7666 7719
E-Mail:
info@attersee.at www.attersee.at