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Gustav Klimt Portrait of Baroness Elisabeth Bachofen-Echt 1914-1916
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Gustav Klimt Portrait of Baroness Elisabeth Bachofen-Echt 1914-1916
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Gustav Klimt Portrait of Baroness Elisabeth Bachofen-Echt 1914-1916
Approx. Dimensions: Framed:
34? x 44?
Artist Name: Gustav Klimt - signed in plate
Medium: Hand Embellished Giclee on Paper
Condition: Excellent
with some markings on Frame
Elisabeth Bachofen-Echt was
the daughter of August and Serena Lederer, Klimt's most important patrons. The family's
collection eventually grew to include some fifteen canvases by the artist,
among them an 1899 portrait of Serena - described by those who knew her as the
best-dressed woman in Vienna - and a 1915 painting of her mother, Charlotte
Pulitzer, a relation of Joseph Pulitzer, founder of the famous prize for
writing. Elisabeth was twenty years old in 1914, when Klimt began the
preparatory studies for the portrait he would complete some two years later. In
almost all Klimt's late portraits, he chose a standing pose and used a
"horizon-line" approach to divide the background into two planes. In
the Bachofen-Echt portrait, the line of demarcation is lower, so that the
illusion of a landscape setting is diminished, though as in Klimt's landscapes,
the horizontal and vertical planes can easily be read as two perfectly flat
bands of color. Elisabeth's stance is echoed by a triangular configuration
similar to that in the Primavesi painting, but this shape is here placed
against the back wall rather than on the floor, so that any feeling of
perspectival distance it may create is automatically cut short, snapped back to
the foreground by the woman's face, which forms the triangle's apex. Like the
Primavesi portrait, this one amply evidences the artist's ability to manipulate
space in order to enhance his sitter's presence.