by Catherine Schofield Sezgin, ARCA Blog Editor-in-Chief
In 1898, 17-year-old Adele, the daughter of Viennese banker Moritz Bauer, meets her future husband Ferdinand Bloch when her older sister Therese marries Ferdinand’s younger brother. A few months later, an anarchist murders the free-spirited Empress Elisabeth, much admired by most of the Hapsburgs’ Austro-Hungarian Empire for her love of horses and her reluctance to participate in royal court politics. An era of stability is ending. A middle-aged Gustav Klimt, who is about to alienate his government sponsors, opens a ‘palace dedicated to Art Nouveau on the Ringstrasse’ for a group dubbed the Secessionists who wrote above the entrance “to every age its art; to art its freedom”.
In 1898, 17-year-old Adele, the daughter of Viennese banker Moritz Bauer, meets her future husband Ferdinand Bloch when her older sister Therese marries Ferdinand’s younger brother. A few months later, an anarchist murders the free-spirited Empress Elisabeth, much admired by most of the Hapsburgs’ Austro-Hungarian Empire for her love of horses and her reluctance to participate in royal court politics. An era of stability is ending. A middle-aged Gustav Klimt, who is about to alienate his government sponsors, opens a ‘palace dedicated to Art Nouveau on the Ringstrasse’ for a group dubbed the Secessionists who wrote above the entrance “to every age its art; to art its freedom”.
A year later, Adele marries
Ferdinand, a man twice her age but not the ladies’ man Klimt is reputed to be, at the same time Sigmund Freud
publishes “The Interpretation of Dreams”, ‘his anatomy of the unconscious
impulses driving individuals and society’ (O’Connor).
The next year Klimt, a favored
court painter, shows the first of three ceiling murals for the University of
Vienna, failing to please the authorities in the next few years with his decade
portrayals on the themes of Philosophy, Medicine, and Jurisprudence. ‘Jewish families were
assimilating in Vienna through art and culture’, as characterized by writer
Karl Kraus. It was these Jewish
patrons who financially support Klimt when the Ministry of Culture rejects Klimt for a professorship at the Academy of Fine Arts.
Although Klimt is not
commissioned to paint Adele’s portrait until 1903, his 1901 portrait of Judith ‘bears an almost photographic
resemblance to Adele’ (O’Connor), leading to support that Klimt may have known Adele earlier and may have had an intimate relationship with her.
Klimt’s Judith is one of the
masterpieces highlighted at Austria’s national art collection at the Belvedere
Palace. ‘A Klimt commission at the
time cost 4,000 crowns, a quarter of the price of a well-appointed country
villa’ (O’Connor):
‘Klimt portrayed
women as individuals, without the presence of a husband, father, or children to
suggest their domestic role…. They soon gained the reputation of having an
affair with the master who was so infamous with his amours.”
A few months after agreeing to
the Bloch-Bauer portrait, Klimt traveled to Ravenna to study the sixth-century
mosaics ‘the greatest legacies of the Byzantine art outside Constantinople’
(O’Connor), which include portraits of the childless and powerful Empress
Theodora, courtesan and wife of Justinian. The mosaics include the use of gold tiles, the material
Klimt grew up studying at the workshop of his father, an engraver who worked on
the city’s monuments. Upon Klimt’s
return to his studio in Vienna, he began sketching another childless woman, the
restless, ambitious and intelligent Adele Bloch-Bauer. Klimt’s reputation for seducing many
women and Adele’s unromantic marriage had led to rumors of a sexual
relationship between artist and subject, according to O’Connor’s interviews
half a century later with Adele’s niece, Maria Altmann:
“So when Adele
went to Klimt’s studio that winter, she faced the possibility of failure as a
woman. No one ever believed Adele
was in love with Ferdinand. But
she was expected to feel lucky, or at least content. Instead, she struggled with sobering disappointment.’ ‘Klimt
made endless sketches of Adele.’ ‘He would make more than a hundred studies of
Adele.’
Klimt painted Portrait of Adele
Bloch-Bauer I from 1904 to 1907.
He also painted Danae and The Kiss (both now at the Belvedere) in
1907, the same year struggling artist Adolf Hitler moves to
Vienna and lives in a ‘hostel financed with large donations from Baron
Nathaniel Rothschild and the Gutmanns’ (O’Connor). While only a Jewish owner of a frame and window store, Samuel
Morgenstern, purchased Hitler’s drawings and watercolors, the artist became
‘fascinated’ by ‘the anti-Semitic rhetoric of Karl Lueger [Vienna’s elected
mayor] … who was able to focus popular discontent on the liberal Jewish
intelligentsia’ (O’Connor).
Part Three continues tomorrow.
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