Description: GUSTAV KLIMT Expectation Stoclet Frieze ~ fine art museum poster print 24x36" Combined shipping available on select posters. Please ask any questions before buying. Thanks! Size: 24" x 36"Stock: Medium weight Artist: GUSTAV KLIMT Publisher: Portal PublicationsPrinted In: USADate: 1998Origin: New old stock (NOS) from a poster store in Vermont that went out of business in the early 2000s.Status: Out-of-print (OOP)Mounting: NOT mounted / loose posterShipping: Ships rolled in a rigid tube. Questions: Please ask any questions before bidding or buying.Notes: Osterreichisches m fur angewandte kunst, Vienna/Bridgman Art Library. The Palais Stoclet in Brussels was built by Josef Hoffmann between 1905 and 1911. Its owner, the banker Adolphe Stoclet, had encountered Hoffmann and his work during the years he and his wife lived in Vienna, The building is a triumphant example of the ideals of the Vienna Workshop. Exterior and interior, furniture and decoration are fused in a way that had not been possible elsewhere. Hoffmann used the word 'Gesamtkunstwerk', which translate as 'the total work of art', or 'artistic synthesis', to describe his goal, and Klimt's frieze for the dinning room admirably illustrates the point. He produced a life-sized working drawing on tracing paper which was attached to the marble plates. The pencil marks were then transferred onto the stone. Several craftsmen - gilders, marble workers and enamellers - collaborated on the project, assembling the frieze in the mosaic workshop of Leopold Forstner, following Klimt's detailed instructions about colours and materials. Like the Beethoven Frieze, the Stoclet Frieze runs around three sides of the room. A tree of life, with ornamental spiraling branches, decorated each of the opposite walls which are identical but for the figures on either side: Expectations, originally called 'The Dancer', and Fulfillment originally called 'Embrace'. On the end wall was a third mosaic panel, apparently abstract, which has recently been identified as a knight. It is a much freer and more imaginative image than the knight of the Beethoven Frieze but probably carries the same symbolic associations. The figure of Expectation is clearly inspired by Egyptian art, both in terms of the woman's profile and the position of her arms and hands. The figure also owes something to a dance popular at the time. Thanks for looking!
Price: 23.2 USD
Location: Colchester, Vermont
End Time: 2025-01-09T01:13:44.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Unit of Sale: Single-Piece Work
Artist: Gustav Klimt
Size: Medium (up to 36in.)
Signed: No
Material: Paper
Framing: Unframed
Original/Licensed Reprint: Open Edition Print
Subject: Famous Paintings/Painters
Type: Poster
Year of Production: 1998
Item Height: 36 in
Theme: Art
Style: Secession
Features: Unframed
Time Period Manufactured: 1990-1999
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Handmade: No
Item Width: 24 in