Motion Study by Rudolf Koppitz - c. 1927 - 32.7 x 24.3 cm  Albertina Motion Study by Rudolf Koppitz - c. 1927 - 32.7 x 24.3 cm  Albertina

Motion Study

gelatin silver print • 32.7 x 24.3 cm
  • Rudolf Koppitz - January 4, 1884 - July 8, 1936 Rudolf Koppitz c. 1927
Rudolf Koppitz, often credited as Viennese or Austrian, was a Photo-Secessionist whose work includes straight photography and modernist images. He was one of the leading representatives of art photography in Vienna between the world wars. Koppitz is best known for his works of the human figure including his iconic Bewegungsstudie ("Motion Study") which we present today and his use of the nude in natural settings. Motion Study is surely the most widely published and best known image in Austrian photography from the early decades of the last century. This is for good reason, as no photograph better captures the cultural strands that characterized the Austrian avant-garde at that time. Here one can see a graphic strength and compositional clarity that reflects the modernist ambitions initiated in the fine as in the applied arts by the Secession and by the Wiener Werkstätte. But what gives the image its power is the aura of mystery, of symbolist sensuality that resonates through this enigmatic grouping of the three uniformly coiffed and draped figures and the one single naked figure. Languid nude, elaborately robed women and undeniable sensuality, in the context of its rigorous and artistic composition, bring to mind the sexual morbidity of Viennese artists like Gustav Klimt and Alphonse Mucha, as well as the Swiss symbolist painter Ferdinand Hodler. This art piece is dedicated to one of our favourite art critics - Jerry Saltz! @jerrysaltz