Klimt’s Drawings

Embracing Couple (Study for the „Beethoven Frieze“), 1902, Leopold Museum, Vienna
Profile of a Girl with Hat and Cloak, 1908/09, Leopold Museum, Vienna
Girl putting on Stockings, 1908/09, Leopold Museum, Vienna
Proning Female Half-Nude with Frilled Dress, 1904, Leopold Museum, Vienna

Klimt’s drawings have to be seen almost exclusively in connection with his paintings. Only about 4,000 – mostly sketches and a handful of watercolours – from the vast number of nude drawings that were produced in the painter’s atelier have survived until today. These have meanwhile been published in a multivolume catalogue of works. Few drawings are signed since Klimt did not intend them for public consumption. Today these floating arrangements of lines are the proud property of museums or much sought-after objects on the art market. In addition, Klimt used a large number of sketchbooks. Unfortunately, these were burnt in 1945 in a fire at the apartment of Emilie Flöge, who inherited part of the Klimt estate after his death in 1918.
Stylistically, Klimt’s drawings, like his paintings, represent the transition from historicism through Jugendstil to his first early expressionist works. The early phase of his development can be seen in his final drawings for “Allegorien und Embleme” (Allegories and Emblems) published by Martin Gerlach in 1881-1884, but also in studies for the music salon at the Palais Dumba in 1898/99. Towards the end of the 1890s, the presence of the so-called “shading style” made itself felt. Parallel lines running from top right to bottom left like “graphic rain” characterize this effective way of drawing which alternates between light and dark.

From 1904/05 on Klimt experimented with new forms and techniques. Swirling lines came to the fore, hard pencil took over from black chalk, and packing paper gave way to opalescent Japanese washi paper. From then on, he also produced many erotic female nudes. Around 1910, Klimt created several close-up half-length portraits which illustrate the psyche of the person portrayed in a very unique way.
In contrast to his paintings, Klimt’s drawings were rarely subjected to particular criticism. Only the reproach for pornography on the occasion of an exhibition at Miethke Gallery in Vienna in 1910 prompted him to exhibit almost nothing more in Austria during the last seven years of his life. The erotic nature of his drawings not only stems from the topic but is expressed by the dynamic contours of the nudes as well as by the curls and frizzles of the model’s clothes. The works from 1910 on, in particular, explain Klimt’s international fame as a draftsman. From that point, his nude drawings seem to be spiritualized, dematerialized and united with infinity.

Seated Girl with Ruffled Skirt, 1910, Leopold Museum, Vienna
Study for the Painting „Judith II“, c. 1908, Leopold Museum, Vienna
Seated Woman, 1910, Leopold Musuem, Vienna

1862-1883: Klimt – Up close and personal

Gustav Klimt was born into an epoch that was shaped by Historicism and which led into Modernism. His family lived in modest circumstances. His father, Ernst Klimt (1834-1892), migrated to Vienna with his parents as an eight-year-old from northern Bohemia and was...

1883-1892: Klimt and the “Artists’ Company”

Frieze at the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, 1890/91On the basis of their successful collaboration at the arts college, Gustav Klimt, Ernst Klimt (1864-1892) and Franz Matsch (1861-1942) founded the “Artists’ Company” in 1883 [1]. Their technically and...

1894-1905: Klimt’s Faculty Paintings

Seldom has there been a project in Austrian art history that aroused so much opposition from its beginnings. The main building of the University of Vienna, the Alma Mater Rudolfina, was completed in the French-Italian Renaissance style by Heinrich Ritter von Ferstel...

1897-1905: Klimt and the Vienna Secession

The foundation of the Vienna Secession is considered a milestone for the artistic renewal of “Vienna 1900” and the birth of Viennese Jugendstil. 23 artists, above all Gustav Klimt, Josef Hoffmann, Joseph Maria Olbrich, Kolo Moser and Carl Moll, dissatisfied with the...

1898-1917: Klimt‘s landscapes

After being already pretty well known for his allegories and female portraits, Gustav Klimt turned relatively late to landscape paintings. The first works of this genre were produced in 1898 [1], when he already was president of the shortly before founded Vienna...

1902: Klimt’s Beethoven Frieze

Beethoven Frieze, Narrow Side: Hostile Forces, Disease, Madness, Death, Lust, Unchastity, Immoderacy, Niggling GriefOf the Vienna Secession exhibitions taking place between 1897 and 1905, the 14th exhibition (April 15th – June 27th, 1902)—dedicated entirely to the...

Klimt and his Patrons in “Vienna of 1900”

Alma Mahler, 1899Friederike Beer-Monti, 1913Eugenia PrimavesiBerta Zuckerkandl,1908Even today, the world remains fascinated with the idea of “Vienna around 1900,” with all its peculiarities and diversity. The Jugendstil painter Gustav Klimt, who was supported and...

1904-1909: Klimt and the Stoclet Palace

ExpectationTree of LifeFulfillmentTree of Life"The Stoclet House is indeed very, very beautiful. The photographs give no idea and do no justice to it. The garden as well is much prettier than I expected [...] And when I walk through this room – I have the strongest...

1903/05-1911: Klimt and the “Golden Phase”

Portrait Adele Bloch-Bauer I, 1907, Neue Galerie, New YorkNot everybody was able to afford works by Gustav Klimt. His clients were mostly men of the upper middle classes. His commissions were a mirror of Viennese society, which, on many occasions, speculated about the...

Klimt and Emilie Flöge

Gustav Klimt und Emilie Flöge in the Garden of Villa Oleander, 1910Gustav and Emilie in a Rowing Boat, 1909Gustav Klimt painted the portrait of Emilie Flöge, who he first met in the 1890s and stayed connected with for the rest of his life, between 1902 and 1904. The...

1908/09: Klimt and the Kunstschau

Seal of the Kunstschau 1908, Leopold Museum, ViennaIn 1908, the emperor Franz Josef celebrated 60 years since his coronation with a procession in honour of the emperor’s jubilee. Numerous artists were involved with the arrangements for the procession, including the...

1903-1915: Klimt and the Depiction of the Cycle of Life

Death and Life, First Version, 1910/11, Leopold Museum, ViennaHope II, 1907-1908, The Museum of Modern Art, New YorkHope I, 1903/04, National Gallery of Canada, OttawaIn addition to representational portraits of women from Viennese society and innovative landscape...

1912-1918: Klimt’s Last Studio

Gustav Klimt worked for nearly 20 years in a studio situated within an overgrown garden in the Josefstadt district. After this building was demolished, his artist colleague Felix Albrecht Harta helped him find a charming little house with a big garden in 1912, in the...