Issue 14 / Autumn 2008
Content:
- Editors' Note
- Carter Ratcliff on Mark Rothko
- Brice Marden on Mark Rothko
- Beat Wyss on Caspar David Friedrich
- Penelope Curtis on Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster
- Linda Nochlin, Milan Kundera and others on Francis Bacon
- Peter Campus, Douglas Gordon and David A Ross in conversation
- Sophie Howarth on The School of Life
- Francesca Pasini on Lucio Fontana
- Cildo Meireles and Frederico Morais
- Simon Grant interviews Robert Morris
- Mark Godfrey on Cildo Meireles
- Lucy Skaer on Leonora Carrington
- Heimo Zobernig, Tim Lee, David Shrigley and Kay Rosen
- Tishani Doshi in the Tate Archive
- Online Exclusive: Peter Campus
- Gustav Klimt and the 1908 Kunstschau

Gustav Klimt
Die drei Lebensalter 1905
Courtesy Belvedere and Ministero per i Beni e le Attività Culturali, Roma © Roma, Galleria nazionale d'arte moderna.
Oil on canvas
180 x 180 cm
At the Belvedere, Vienna, until 18 January 2009
Context:
Klimt in TATE ETC. Issue 13 (Summer 2008)Eleanora Louis on the history of the Vienna SecessionBelvedere onlineThe recent Klimt exhibition at Tate Liverpool lacked one of the icons of the artist’s work – The Kiss, a loan declined due its delicate nature. However the painting is now on view in one of the impressive series of rooms in this exhibition that recreates the original setting 100 years ago of the Kunstchau – the building created under the energy of Josef Hoffmann, Gustav Klimt, Otto Prutscher, Koloman Moser and many others, to coincide with the celebrations in Vienna for the sixtieth anniversary of emperor Francis Joseph I’s reign – even though they were not invited to take part in the official celebrations.

Berthold Löffer
Kunstschau Wien 1908 1908
© Wien Museum
Lithograph
68.3 x 96.1 cm
The wooden building and surrounding area, spread over 6,500 square was erected remarkably quickly in a few months and included over 50 exhibition rooms, courtyards, gardens, a café, and even a small cemetery - a Gesamtkunstwerk of sorts. Can you imagine anything on this scale now? At the opening, Klimt made a stirring speech, outlining what he thought the exhibition was about. ‘It is, he said: ‘a show of force of Austrian ambitions in art, and a faithful report on the current state of culture in our empire.’ He also thought that he considered that art exhibitions were not the ideal forum ‘through which to bring artists and audience together’. Instead, he declared that he would prefer to ‘work on major public art projects.’ The Kunstchau was in effect both. Klimt, ever the showman, led on by his canny image-maker Carl Moll, was good at this kind of headline-grabbing enterprise, and the Kunstchau was like some giant business card to attract clients. But it benefited from being able to impress the visitors with the art too.

The opening of the Kunstschau in 1908
© ÖNB / Wien, Bildarchiv
The artworks included in this exhibition include many from the original exhibition including painting by Carl Moll, early works by Franz Kupka, and pieces by Max Oppenheimer and many lesser known painters. As well as The Kiss, the great Klimt works include Die drei Lebensalter (1905), that has come from an Italian public collection, shown in its reconstructed room (that also sadly has some notable absences on the wall). Elsewhere there are sculptures, mosaics, textiles, glassware, silverware and furniture – the highlight of these being Josef Hoffmann's stunning yet simply lattice-designed silver work that must have surely influenced the designs for American skyscrapers? One of the most enchanting sections is a room dedicated to art for children, designed by the students of Adolf Bohm that included a doll's house by Magda Mautner von Markhof. As well as works of art, the exhibition includes documentary photographs, original plans, as well as the recreation of a room of posters designed by members of the Wiener Werkstätte, placed as they would have been originally shown.

'Room for Poster Art' in Neue Folge XIX (art magazine), Leipzig 1908
Courtesy Belvedere


