BÖCKLIN, Arnold - b. 1827 Basel, d. 1901 Firenze - WGA

BÖCKLIN, Arnold

(b. 1827 Basel, d. 1901 Firenze)

Swiss painter. He was, with Ferdinand Hodler the major Swiss painter of the 19th century, and he exerted a great influence on the German-speaking countries through the expression of a heightened Romanticism and poeticism.

He was trained in Germany, Flanders, and Paris, and spent seven years in Rome (1850-57), where he transformed his early naturalistic landscapes, more or less in the manner of Corot, into symbolic subjects with figures epitomizing the mood of the landscape. In the 1860s he visited Pompeii, where the ancient Roman frescoes led him to attempt classical history subjects, often harsh in colour.

He married an Italian orphan named Angela. Their Catholic union created endless problems in the Protestant painter’s hometown even though the couple mostly lived in Florence and Rome. Angela, who bore Böcklin eighteen children, resolutely opposed his working from any female model than herself.

In 1866 he resided at Basle. He was in Munich in 1871-74, in 1885 in Hottingen (Switzerland). However, like other German artists of the period, he spent much of rest of his life in Italy, where he died in Fiesole near Florence.

The work by which he is best known, The Island of the Dead, was first painted when he was living in Florence (1874-85) and was repeated in many versions. This painting partly evokes the English Cemetery, Florence, close to his studio and where his baby daughter Maria had been buried. It has a curiously haunted quality; the same quality can be found in his Pan (which also exists in several versions) and in some other landscapes.

Most of his works are in his native Basle, where the Museum has a frescoed staircase and in Munich and other German museums.

Attack by Pirates
Attack by Pirates by

Attack by Pirates

B�cklin was one of the most celebrated and influential artists in central Europe in the later 19th century despite contemporary and posthumous criticism. His work is noted for its imaginative and idiosyncratic interpretation of themes from Classical mythology. Much of his prolific output consists of classical landscapes populated with such creatures as fauns and nymphs or such scenes as mermaids and mermen erotically frolicking. His most famous work is “The Island of the Dead” (five versions, 1880 and after) is not typical except in its theme of death and its joining of naturalism and fantasy. The Surrealists and artists such as de Chirico valued his work for its irrationality; his work, however, was not seriously considered again until the 1960s and 1970s.

Campagna Landscape
Campagna Landscape by

Campagna Landscape

B�cklin eschewed the barroom sensuality and “for real” finish of the Parisian’s Salon art for a far more liberated and original experience. With radically differing styles at his command, the painter could render sensitive, almost Impressionistic views, such as this early landscape.

Castle by the Sea (Murder in the Castle Garden)
Castle by the Sea (Murder in the Castle Garden) by

Castle by the Sea (Murder in the Castle Garden)

Island of the Dead (fifth version)
Island of the Dead (fifth version) by

Island of the Dead (fifth version)

This is the last of five versions of a painting commissioned from B�cklin; it was purchased by the museum immediately after its completion. The artist works here with metaphors that symbolize the sublimity of nature compared to the existence of humans. The rocky island protrudes monumentally from the calm sea. It seems to be a cemetery created by nature and stands for something lasting. In the middle of the symmetrically arranged composition, dark cypress trees tower up, the tops of which move slightly in the cloudy sky. A boat with a person wrapped in a white cloth standing in front of a coffin is gliding towards the island. With the signature on the lintel bar of a grave opening on the right in the picture, B�cklin created his imaginary grave during his lifetime. This ambiguous main work of symbolism has been artistically reshaped in “afterimages” by artists such as Max Klinger, Salvador Dali and Max Ernst.

The five versions of the painting are the following.

First version: 1880, oil on canvas, 111 x 155 cm, �ffentliche Kunstsammlung, Basel.

Second version: 1880, oil on wood, 74 x 122 cm, Metropolitan Museum, New York.

Third version: 1883, oil on wood, 80 x 150 cm, Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin.

Fourth version: 1884; oil on zinc, 81 x 151 cm, destroyed in 1945.

Fifth version: 1886, oil on wood, 80 x 150 cm, Museum der Bildenden K�nste, Leipzig.

Island of the Dead (first version)
Island of the Dead (first version) by

Island of the Dead (first version)

The Island of the Dead is the Swiss artist Arnold B�cklin’s most famous composition. Beginning in 1880, he painted five slightly modified versions, four of which have survived.

Each version of the painting shows a magically illuminated island rising from the sea against a gloomy night sky. Burial chambers have been carved into the rocky cliffs around the natural harbour, with dark cypresses rising above them. A boat with a coffin, a statuesque figure swathed in white like a mummy and gazing away from the viewer, and an oarsman glides slowly across the water towards the island. Although we can almost hear the soft splashing of the oars, this only heightens the incredible silence that pervades the scene - a “visual silence” underscored by the equilibrium of horizontals and verticals. The low-lying horizon creates an impression of endless depths. The sparingness of the composition is matched by the palette: reddish rocks reflecting the last evening sunlight, the eerie white of the figure in the boat, the deep blue and violet of water and sky (which in other versions is stormy), and the dark, nearly blackish green of the cypresses.

Many attempts have been made to find the original model for this mysterious island: the cemetery island of St. Jurai south of Dubrovnik, Pontikonissi off Corfu, and one of the Ponza Islands in the Gulf of Gaeta have been suggested. But an identical correspondence for B�cklin’s fascinating view has been found nowhere in reality.

Beyond its evocation of life’s transience, the potential meanings of this major work of Symbolism have yet to be entirely decoded. The meaning of the enigmatic image ultimately remains up to the viewer’s imagination.

The five versions of the painting are the following.

First version: 1880, oil on canvas, 111 x 155 cm, �ffentliche Kunstsammlung, Basel.

Second version: 1880, oil on wood, 74 x 122 cm, Metropolitan Museum, New York.

Third version: 1883, oil on wood, 80 x 150 cm, Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin.

Fourth version: 1884; oil on zinc, 81 x 151 cm, destroyed in 1945.

Fifth version: 1886, oil on wood, 80 x 150 cm, Museum der Bildenden K�nste, Leipzig.

Island of the Dead (second version)
Island of the Dead (second version) by

Island of the Dead (second version)

B�cklin’s patron Marie Berna commissioned this painting in 1880 as a memorial to her late husband. It is based on an unfinished canvas that she saw in the artist’s studio in Florence; at her request, he added the draped coffin and the shrouded figure to the rowboat in the foreground. B�cklin later wrote to her, “you will be able to dream yourself into the world of dark shadows.” Between 1883 and 1886, he painted three additional versions of the subject, each slightly different. The five versions of the painting are the following.

First version: 1880, oil on canvas, 111 x 155 cm, �ffentliche Kunstsammlung, Basel.

Second version: 1880, oil on wood, 74 x 122 cm, Metropolitan Museum, New York.

Third version: 1883, oil on wood, 80 x 150 cm, Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin.

Fourth version: 1884; oil on zinc, 81 x 151 cm, destroyed in 1945.

Fifth version: 1886, oil on wood, 80 x 150 cm, Museum der Bildenden K�nste, Leipzig.

The scene was widely reproduced and inspired numerous artists, including the composer Sergei Rachmaninoff and the Surrealist painter Salvador Dal�.

Island of the Dead (third version)
Island of the Dead (third version) by

Island of the Dead (third version)

The Island of the Dead is one of B�cklin’s most popular pictorial inventions. He achieved this effect by combining a few motifs into an impressive mood formula. The image motifs of island, water, castle or villa by the sea were already present in his work long before. But here they are, as it were, condensed into a worldview. The place depicted is eerie, the view through the stairs does not penetrate into the dark interior. The strict symmetry, the calm vertical and horizontal lines, the circular island surrounded by high rock walls, together with the magical lighting, create an atmosphere of the solemn and sublime, evoke the feeling of silence and rapture. The motionless surface of the water and the boat with the white wrapped figure behind the coffin add a melancholy tone.

This picture in Berlin is the third of five versions. It was commissioned by the art dealer Fritz Gurlitt in 1883. With business acumen, he commissioned Max Klinger to do an etching based on the work. It was this version that established the painting’s extraordinary fame in the late 19th century. Distributed in countless engravings and photographs, “Die Toteninsel” reflects the attitude to life of an entire era and has thus become a fin de si�cle image of identification.

The five versions of the painting are the following.

First version: 1880, oil on canvas, 111 x 155 cm, �ffentliche Kunstsammlung, Basel.

Second version: 1880, oil on wood, 74 x 122 cm, Metropolitan Museum, New York.

Third version: 1883, oil on wood, 80 x 150 cm, Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin.

Fourth version: 1884; oil on zinc, 81 x 151 cm, destroyed in 1945.

Fifth version: 1886, oil on wood, 80 x 150 cm, Museum der Bildenden K�nste, Leipzig.

Odysseus and Polyphemus
Odysseus and Polyphemus by

Odysseus and Polyphemus

B�cklin’s training as a landscape painter shines through in this unconventional interpretation of an episode from the ancient Greek epic, the Odyssey. Set on the island of the Cyclops - one-eyed, ill-tempered giants - this dramatic scene finds the escaping hero Odysseus calling back to the shore, taunting the Cyclops Polyphemus, who heaves a boulder after the boat. Playing up strange, grotesque, and even ridiculous elements of such stories, B�cklin conjured a pre-classical world governed by violence and lust, while giving it a plausible setting rooted in naturalistic observation.

Pan Dancing with Children
Pan Dancing with Children by

Pan Dancing with Children

Following the Symbolist taste of his times, Arnold B�cklin devoted many of his paintings to subjects from Classical Antiquity. Dancing children with a faun and putti were featured in the composition The Greek Gods, a work painted for the collector Adolf Friedrich von Schack in 1869. In Pan Dancing with Children, B�cklin lends the motif a special twist by equipping the god Pan with a transverse flute instead of his more usual panpipes. The shepherds worshipped Pan as the god of the forests and fields and sought his protection for their flocks. His favourite abode was said to be on Mount Lycaeum in Arcadia, where he indulged in the love of music, dance, and good cheer for which he was famous. This wild dance by naked children with garlands of flowers in their hair would doubtless have been part of such bucolic festivities.

Pan in the Reeds
Pan in the Reeds by

Pan in the Reeds

Roger and Angelica
Roger and Angelica by

Roger and Angelica

Angelica is the daughter of a king of Cathay in Orlando Furioso, by the Italian poet Ariosto (1474-1533), a romantic epic poem about the conflict between Christians and Saracens at the time of Charlemagne. Angelica was loved by several knights, Christian and pagan, among them the Christian hero Orlando (Roland). He was maddened (furioso) with grief and jealousy because she became the lover of, and eventually married, the Moor Modero. Roger (Ruggiero) freeing Angelica is a theme very like Perseus and Andromeda. Angelica chained to a rock by the seashore is about to be attacked by a sea-monster, the orc. Roger, one of the pagan champions, arrives riding on a hippogriff (a monster, the creation of the poets of the late middle ages). He dazzles the monster with his magic shield, and places a magic ring on Angelica’s finger to protect her. He undoes her bonds and they ride off together.

B�cklin’s painting is a romantic rendering of the Renaissance tale.

Self-Portrait with Death as a Fiddler
Self-Portrait with Death as a Fiddler by

Self-Portrait with Death as a Fiddler

B�cklin moved to Munich in 1871 and was close to artists in the circle around Wilhelm Leibl, particularly Hans Thoma, on whom his work had a strong influence. Two self-portraits from this period suggest a new degree of self-confidence. The unfinished Self-Portrait with Death as Fiddler, begun c. 1871 during the artist’s Munich residence, returns to the Medieval motif of the Dance of Death, and to the sharp focus of German early-sixteenth-century likenesses. It is partly modeled upon a supposed work by Holbein, who was famous for his dealing with the theme of the fatal dance, and for his realistic portraiture.

Sleeping Diana Watched by Two Fauns
Sleeping Diana Watched by Two Fauns by

Sleeping Diana Watched by Two Fauns

Summer
Summer by
The Deposition
The Deposition by

The Deposition

B�cklin’s flair for archaization, one already employed by the Nazarenes, is seen in the Quattrocento colouring of this Deposition. Part camp theatricality, part convinced and convincing Christianity, part prophecy, this canvas proved to be an Avant-Garde and unpopular work when first exhibited at the Vienna Exposition.

The Surf
The Surf by

The Surf

B�cklin’s The Surf recalls Rubens’s Andromeda, but this woman exposes herself to rocks and water of her own free will. Flesh, stone, and water were an elemental triad dear to B�cklin’s art, each bringing out the others’ qualities.

Villa by the Sea
Villa by the Sea by

Villa by the Sea

B�cklin treated this subject several times. This version is an early oil sketch.

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