Standing Naked Couple, Embracing. Study for “This Kiss to the Whole World” from the Beethoven Frieze by Gustav Klimt - 1901 - 45 x 30.8 cm Leopold Museum Standing Naked Couple, Embracing. Study for “This Kiss to the Whole World” from the Beethoven Frieze by Gustav Klimt - 1901 - 45 x 30.8 cm Leopold Museum

Standing Naked Couple, Embracing. Study for “This Kiss to the Whole World” from the Beethoven Frieze

pencil on paper • 45 x 30.8 cm
  • Gustav Klimt - July 14, 1862 - February 6, 1918 Gustav Klimt 1901

It is Sunday so we continue our special month with the Leopold Museum's collection. This time with one of the iconic Gustav Klimt's scenes. :)

During the summer of 1901, Klimt produced in a brief span a large number of studies for the Beethoven Frieze, a wall frieze for the Vienna Secession included in the celebrated Beethoven exhibition between April and July of 1902. This drawing of a standing, naked couple was the preliminary study for the final section of the frieze depicting a couple locked in embrace. It illustrates This Kiss to the Whole World, which Beethoven adapted from Schiller’s Ode to Joy and set to music in the final chorus of his Ninth Symphony. It is Richard Wagner’s interpretation of Beethoven’s symphony that guided Klimt’s thematic approach to the frieze. The artistic core of the Beethoven exhibition was the statue of the composer by Max Klinger, which was surrounded by a multitude of artistic contributions from the members of the Secession. The work’s graphic and two-dimensional design style undoubtedly singled him out and indicated a new direction for Viennese art.

P.S. If you're a Klimt fan, you must read our article about the Beethoven Frieze. <3  And if you love Gustav Klimt as much as we do, please consider our Klimt prints (The Kiss anyone?) printed in super-high quality. Check them out on DailyArt Shop.  :)