
Gustav Klimt, Danaë, 1907. Wikimedia Commons. · PD
达那厄
作品信息
故事
Klimt painted this around 1907, at the peak of his golden phase, when he was working real gold leaf into his surfaces. The subject is Danae from Greek myth, a princess her father had locked away because of a prophecy that her son would kill him. The god Zeus reaches her anyway, coming to her as a shower of gold, and that is the moment Klimt shows. She is asleep, curled up tight, filling nearly the whole canvas, and the gold pours down between her thighs in a river of coins and swirling shapes. The painting is small, only about 77 by 83 centimetres, and it has stayed in private hands rather than a public gallery. It was with a Vienna dealer, the Galerie Wurthle, until the 1990s, and then passed to the family of a private Austrian collector, where it remains.




