Title: Symbolism: Fin de Si
1- Symbolism Fin de Siècle Europe
- Flight from modernity, Primitivist critique of
European culture, reaction against 19th century
mechanistic Positivism the dominant faith in
science and technology. - Objective realism" is rejected for the
representation of personal symbols, memory,
imagination, and dreams to evoke a sympathetic
understanding of the artist's Idea in the
viewer as music does. - "Art has gone through a long period of
aberration caused by physics, chemistry,
mechanics, and the study of nature....Artists,
having lost all their savagery, went astray on
every path." - Gauguin
2Symbolism and Decadence Subjective
vision CORRESPONDENCES (a literal translation
from the French) Charles Baudelaire,
1857 Nature is a temple whose living columns
sometimes allow confused words to escape man
passes through these forests of symbols, Which
regard him with familiar looks. As diffuse echoes
from afar mingle in a shadowy and profound
unison as vast as the darkness and the
light, scents, colors and sounds commune. Here
are some perfumes fresh as infants' skin, sweet
as the oboe's song and green as the prairies -
while others, corrupt, rich and triumphant, have
the expansiveness of infinite things, the
ambergris, musk, benzoin, and incense, that chant
the ecstasies of the spirit and the
senses. Charles Baudelaire's Theory of
Correspondences in which objects become signs for
the artist's personal ideas and feelings includes
the idea of "Synesthesia" in which the 5 senses
yield equivalent and concomitant responses, so
that a line can be "noble" or "false (Gauguin),
a shade of yellow, "sour" and clanging
(Kandinsky).
3Paul Gauguin, Mallarmé (Nevermore), lithograph
for publication in artists little magazine,1891
4Paul Gauguin, Where Do We Come From? What Are We?
Where Are We Going? Oil on burlap, 139 375 cm,
18971898Symbolism and Primitivism
5Studio of the North in Pont Aven,
1888Cloissonism and JaponismPost-Impressionist
(Symbolist) linear, flat patterning, subjective
rather than objective vision, no visible light
source
Gauguin, Vision After the Sermon Jacob
Wrestling with the Angel, 1888 (Pont Aven)
Emile Bernard, Breton Women in a Green Meadow,
1888 (Pont Aven)
6(left) Paul Sérusier, Talisman, 1888, oil on
cigar box lidNabis, Pont Aven School of
Gauguin (Studio of the North)(right)
Sérusier, Portrait of Paul Ranson Dressed as a
Prophet (Nabi)1890, oil on canvas, 60 x 45 cm
7Maurice Denis (French Nabis and Symbolist
painter, 18701943), Muses in the Sacred Wood,
oil on canvas, 1893
-
- Remember that a picture, before being a battle
horse, a nude, an anecdote or whatnot, is
essentially a flat surface covered with colors
assembled in a certain order. - Maurice Denis, Definition of Neo-Traditionalism
, 1890
8James Ensor (Belgian Symbolist, 1860-1949), Self
Portrait with Masks, 1899
. . . and my suffering, scandalized, insolent,
cruel, malicious masks. . . I have joyfully shut
myself in the solitary milieu ruled by the mask
with a face of violence and brilliance.
James Ensor
9James Ensor, Entry of Christ into Brussels in
1889, 1888, 99 x 169, oil on canvas, The
GettyCompare Dostoyevsky's The Grand Inquisitor
from The Brothers Karamazov
10Ensor, detail of Entry of Christ into Brussels in
1889
11James Ensor, The Intrigue, 1890, oil on
canvasCompare Francisco Goya (Spanish,
1746-1828), The Witches Sabbath (detail) 1820-23,
fresco transferred to canvas
12Odilon Redon (French Symbolist painter and
graphic artist (1840-1916), The Eye Balloon,
charcoal, 1878 (right) Redon, The Smiling
Spider, 1881, charcoal, 49.5 x 39 cm
13Redon, Silence, 1911, oil on paper
- My sole aim To instill in the spectator, by
means of quite unexpected allurements, all the
evocations and fascinations of the unknown on the
boundaries of thought. - Redon
14Edvard Munch (Norwegian Symbolist-Expressionist
1863-1944)Self Portrait with Cigarette, 1895,
oil on canvas,110.5 x 85.5 cm
15Edvard Munch, The Vampire, oil on canvas, 1893
16Munch, Puberty, 1895, oil on canvas, 60 x 43
17Munch, The Dance of Life, 1899-1900, oil on
canvas, 49 1/2 x 75, National Gallery, Oslo
18- Munch, The Lonely Ones, woodcut, 1894, and
painting, 1935
19Munch, The Scream, 1893, Casein/waxed crayon and
tempera on paper (cardboard), 35 7/8 x 29,
National Gallery, Oslo(Left) Munch, The Scream,
1893, woodcut
20- This version of The Scream was stolen from the
Norwegian National Gallery in 1994.
August, 2004 thieves escaping with another
version of The Scream from the Munch museum in
Norway. Recovered August, 2006 with minor damage.
Two paintings are valued at 15 million dollars.
Madonna, 1894-95
Recovery CBS news
21Gustave Klimt (Austrian Symbolist, 1862-1918)
Music I, 1895Oil on canvas, 37 x 44.5 cm
22Klimt, Idyll, 1884, Oil on canvas, 49.5 x 73.5
cmVienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum
23Klimt, Love, 1895, Oil on canvas, 60 x 44 cm,
Vienna Art Historical Museum
24Klimt, Pallas Athene, 1898, Oil on canvas, 75 x
75 cm
25Joseph Maria Olbrich, (Austrian,
1867-1908)Vienna Secession building, 1898,
Jugendstijl
Above the entrance To every age its art and to
art its freedom
26Vienna Secession Building, Jugendstijl details of
front
27Klimt, Beethoven Frieze The Hostile Powers,
1902, Casein paint on stucco, 220 x 635 cm,
Vienna Secession building, lower floor
28Klimt, Beethoven Frieze Praise to Joy, the
God-descended, 1902Casein paint on stucco, 220 x
470 cm
29Klimt, Death Life, 1916