
Fir Wood I
Gustav Klimt·1901
Historical Context
Klimt produced a series of forest interiors during his Attersee summers, of which Fir Wood I (1901) is among the earliest. He was fascinated by the pattern-like density of closely packed tree trunks seen straight-on, which allowed him to treat the forest as a decorative field rather than a traditional landscape recession. The Kunsthaus Zug picture shows vertical firs receding into atmospheric depth, the forest floor carpeted in undergrowth that fills every gap.
Technical Analysis
The composition is radically frontal: tree trunks rise parallel across the picture plane with no dominant foreground focal point. Klimt applies paint in small, varied marks to capture the texture of bark and foliage, with cool greens shifting to warmer ochres near the ground.
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