Home Mercedes SL 300 Gustav Klimt: Yearning for the countryside

Gustav Klimt: Yearning for the countryside

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Gustav Klimt: Yearning for the countryside

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Before 1907, Klimt spent the summer months staying at the Bräuhof Litzlberg, close to the Villa Paulick.  In 1908, as the artist’s finances improved and he felt a greater need for privacy, the Flöge family and Gustav Klimt moved their summer quarters to Kammerl bei Kammer on the more elegant western shore of the Attersee. They stayed there in the Villa Oleander, from mid-June to mid-September every year until 1912. From their first year there, Klimt was working on what is probably his best-known Gesamtkunstwerk – the drafts and blueprints for the dining room freeze at Stoclet Palace in Brussels. Preparations and work on this project forced him repeatedly to postpone his visits to Attersee. By 1914, he was starting to feel almost like someone “sentenced to forced labour for life” and he feared he would never see the countryside again as his work denied him the possibility of leaving Vienna. Fortunately, things turned out differently. In 1914, the guest house at the Villa Brauner in nearby Weissenbach became a new haven of tranquillity for him, while also becoming a place of great productivity – he would create twelve paintings there.

Hermann Flöge, eine Unbekannte, Barbara Flöge, Therese Flöge, Gustav Klimt, Hermine Flöge, Otto Prutscher und Pauline Flöge in Weißenbach am Attersee, 1914.
© Austrian Archives / brandstaetter images / picturedesk.com

Among the photographs from that time, one from 1910 is particularly striking. It shows the summer guests Gustav Klimt and Emilie Flöge in the garden of the Villa Oleander, with two wicker chairs in the background. The same chairs also appear in another photograph, from 1914 in which the large Flöge family can be seen at a garden party in Weissenbach am Attersee. Helene, the sister of Emilie and Hermann Flöge, had married Gustav Klimt’s younger brother, Ernst, in 1891. When Ernst died at a young age, Gustav Klimt became the guardian of his niece Helene, who was also known as “Lentschi”. As his heir and also the heir of Emilie Flöge, Helene Klimt, whose married was name Donner, inherited the wicker chairs, which had probably been owned by Emilie Flöge’s family. After Helene’s death in 1980, her house in Weissenbach am Attersee, Gmauret 7, was cleared and sold by her heirs.

There was no space in the removal company’s van for the two wicker armchairs and so they were given as a gift to the gardener and caretaker, who had maintained the property for many years. The chairs were made at Korbfabrikation Prag-Rudniker and were always referred to as “the Klimt chairs”. Until last year, they were on display at the Gustav Klimt Center, a partner of the Leopold Museum on the Attersee.

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