Especially in his late drawings Klimt engages with homosexual love. In this late painting the bodies of the women seem to be dematerialized. The background dissolves in a decorative ornamental space. Klimt's appropriation of oriental ornamentation reached its high point around 1917 with such paintings as The Friends. Of course, iconographical borrowing, the mainstay of his earliest commissions, was not new to the artist, nor was he a stranger to Japanese design. Throughout the mosaic period he had explored ambiguous figure/ground relationships similar to those seen in Japanese prints, but his nagging fidelity to three-dimensional verisimilitude had always prevented him from achieving total planar unity. Thematically, of course, the subject of The Friends was a recapitulation of the lesbian imagery that had recurred in Klimt's work ever since the 1904 Water Serpents. However, the world in which The Friends dwell seems a much less forbidding place than that of the Water Serpents, and they are far less forbidding people. Despite the surreal spatial qualities of the canvas, it is evident that this couple does not inhabit the watery depths, but lives above ground, breathing real air. Both faces are shown, and they engage the viewer sympathetically. The feeling between them is less erotic passion than tender affection, and the "unnatural" homosexual union here is given a yin/yang quality of inevitability. This dualism is expressed by both, the physical appearances of the two - one clothed and one naked - and by the birds that flank them. On the left is a fantastic phoenix, symbol of regeneration; while on the right are the inevitable forces of doom, the raven and the evil, red-eyed swan. The friends thus become symbols of the eternal human predicament; a couple whose situation, far from being anomalous, assumes a prototypical magnitude.
We dedicate this art piece to our friends Ala and Dominika.
More Love. Less Hate. #LoveWins