“The Maiden” by Gustav Klimt depicts the dreamy sensuality of a young girl in a dream state.
The central sleeping girl is fantasizing about future possibilities for her self in a dream represented by the patchwork quilt of women surrounding her.
Klimt has created a cloud-like shaped constellation of women with colorful patterned scarves and gowns sprinkled with flower garlands.
The Maiden’s long dress is covered with spirals symbolizing fertility and the ever-changing and evolving universe. Klimt’s eclectic influences included Classical Greek, Byzantine mosaics, and Medieval styles.
Klimt emerged from an impoverished childhood to become an artist who significantly influenced the Viennese Secession and Art Nouveau movement.
His elaborate, explicitly sensual art encompassed themes of regeneration, love, and death.
Inspired by the emotionally expressive works of Matisse and Toulouse-Lautrec, Klimt opted for intricate patterns in multicolor that infused the work with movement and fluidity.
For Klimt, the female form representing the essential purity of human urges, often suppressed by the conservative cultures of his time.
He aimed to inscribe on human forms their destiny as naturally changing exotic beings. Klimt is regarded as setting free the female spirit and was a renowned critic of his time and its outdated cultural morals.
“The Maiden” was one of Klimt’s last paintings completed before he died in 1918. He left behind an unfinished painting with the title of “The Bride.”
It t was planned as a companion piece to this painting. In “The Bride,” the maiden awakes from her dream to become a bride.
Gustav Klimt
Gustav Klimt (1862-1918) was a symbolist painter and one of the most prominent members of the Vienna Secession movement.
Klimt’s primary subject was the female body, and eroticism marks his works.
Klimt was influenced by Japanese art and its methods and achieved success with the paintings of his “golden phase,” many of which include gold leaf. “The Kiss” is Klimt’s most famous painting.
Klimt died in 1918, having suffered a stroke and pneumonia due to the worldwide influenza epidemic of that year.
Numerous paintings by him were left unfinished, including the companion piece to this painting.
The Maiden
- Title: The Maiden
- Alternative: The Virgins
- Artist: Gustav Klimt
- Year: 1912-1913
- Medium: oil on canvas
- Dimensions: 190 × 200 cm (74.8 × 78.7 ″)
- Museum: National Gallery in Prague
Gustav Klimt
- Artist: Gustav Klimt
- Born: 1862 – Baumgarten, Austrian Empire
Died: 1918 (aged 55) – Vienna, Austria-Hungary - Nationality: Imperial Austrian
- Movement: Symbolism, Art Nouveau
- Notable work:
- Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I
- The Kiss
- Margaret Stonborough-Wittgenstein
- Portrait of Hermine Gallia
- The House of Guardaboschi
- The Maiden
Klimt – The Virgin (The Maiden)
Gustav Klimt: Life of an Artist
Explore the National Gallery in Prague
- Madonna of Zbraslav
- Votive Panel of Jan Očko of Vlašim
- “Green Wheat Field with Cypress” by Vincent van Gogh
- “The Maiden” by Gustav Klimt
Gustav Klimt: A collection of 164 paintings
Explore Museums in Czech
- Prague Museums
- National Gallery in Prague
- National Museum in Prague
- City of Prague Museum
- Jewish Museum in Prague
- Museum of Communism, Czech Republic
- Czech Proverbs and Quotes
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“Truth is like fire; to tell the truth means to glow and burn.”
– Gustav Klimt
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Photo Credit: 1) Gustav Klimt [Public domain]
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