Eines der TOP 10 teuersten Gemaelde der Welt
- Museumsqualitaet zu erschwinglichen Preisen -
Meisterwerk Reproduktion in Anlehnung an / Inspired by
Gustav Klimt
Adele Bloch-Bauer I
Versteigert
bei: Sotheby´s in New York
am: 19.06.2006
für: 135,0 Mio. Dollar
Adele Bloch-Bauer I ist ein Ölgemälde mit umfangreichen Blattsilber- und Blattgoldauflagen auf Leinwand im Format 138 x 138 Zentimeter. Das Bildnis, auch „Goldene Adele“ genannt, ist ein eines der bedeutendsten Werke Klimts, wie auch des österreichischen Jugendstils (Wiener Secession) insgesamt. Im Zuge der Medienberichterstattung rund um die Rueckgabe des Gemaeldes an die Erben durch die Republik Oesterreich wurde sie mitunter als "Ikone" der kulturellen Identitaet des Landes bezeichnet. Das Gemaelde zeigt Adele Bloch-Bauer (1881–1925), Tochter des Generaldirektors des Wiener Bankvereins Moritz Bauer, im Alter von etwa 26 Jahren. Adele Bauer hatte 1899, im Alter von 18 Jahren, den deutlich älteren Ferdinand Bloch (1864–1945) geheiratet. Das Bild Adele Bloch-Bauer I wurde direkt nach der Fertigstellung 1907 im Atelier des Kuenstlers in Wien ausgestellt und tauchte im gleichen Jahr erstmalig mit Abbildung in der Zeitschrift Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration auf.
Der US-amerikanische Kosmetikhersteller Ronald S. Lauder ersteigerte das Bild am 19.06.2006 bei einer Auktion in den USA und zahlte den sensationellen Preis von 135 Millionen Dollar (107 Mio. Euro) dafür.
MUSEUMS QUALITÄT ZU ERSCHWINGLICHEN PREISEN
Beschreibung
* Inspiriert und in Anlehnung an das Werk des oben genannten Künstlers
* Aufwendig erstellt mit importierten Ölfarben auf bester importierter Leinwand
* 100% von Hand gemalt
Abmessungen wie das Original:
138 x 138 cm 429.00 Euro
* Weitere mögliche Abmessungen:
½ der Originalabmessungen 69 x 69 cm 139.00 Euro
¾ der Originalabmessungen 104 x 104 cm 299.00 Euro
1½ der Originalabmessungen 207 x 207 cm 999.00 Euro
Doppelte Originalabmessungen 276 x 276 cm 1.599.00 Euro
Weitere / andere Abmessungen sind möglich. Bei Bedarf kontaktieren Sie uns bitte um ein individuelles Angebot.
Unsere Künstler
Alle unsere Reproduktionen berühmter und weniger berühmter Meisterwerke sind von unseren Künstlern per Hand gemalte Replikationen. Die Künstler unserer Gruppe sind in der Regel Absolventen einer thailändischen Universität, wir haben in unserer Gruppe allerdings auch Autodidakten, die teilweise eigene Bilder kreieren und diese dann im Art Cafe in Pattaya / Thailand ausstellen: ()
Zahlung
Überweisung Auf Konto bei der Citibank Braunschweig in Deutschland
PayPal (Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Discover, ECheck)
Bitte zahlen Sie innerhalb von 7 Tagen nach Abschluss der Transaktion.
Versand, Abwicklung & Gebühren
* Alle Bilder werden, wenn nicht anders vereinbart, vom Postamt Banglamung (Provinz
Chonburi) Thailand per Einschreiben / Luftpost verschickt.
Um unsere Kunden vor Zoll und Einfuhrsteuer zu schützen, deklarieren wir die Sendungen als Geschenk mit einem minderen Wert.
Porto und Verpackungs-Gebühren:
* Europa 25.00 Euros
* USA/Kanada 30.00 Euros
* Australien/ New Seeland 25.00 Euros
* Afrika 35.00 Euros
* Asien 15.00 Euros
Kombinations-Rabatt auf weitere Bestellungen: 50% Nachlass auf Porto und Verpackungspauschale bei Kauf eines jeden weiteren Gemäldes.
Gemälde können auch per EMS (Express Mailing Service der Thailändischen Post mit einer Zustellung innerhalb von 3-5 Arbeitstagen) oder per Kurierdienst, DHL, TNT etc mit höheren Tarifen verschickt werden:
Aufschlag pro Sendung für Versand per EMS 35,00 Euro
Aufschlag pro Sendung für Versand per Kurierdienst wie z.B. DHL 75,00 Euro
Verpackung
Die erworbenen Gemälde werden in einer PVC Tube gerollt (je nach Abmessung bis zu 5 Bilder) und dann sicher verschickt.
Lieferzeit
Alle Bilder werden - sofern nicht anders vereinbart - bis spätestens 15 Arbeitstage (3 Wochen) nach Zahlungseingang verschickt. Der reguläre Postweg einer Sendung, die per Einschreiben Luftpost von Thailand abgeschickt wurde, dauert in der Regel etwa 10 – 14 Tage zu jedem beliebigen Ort der Welt.
Versicherung
Is optional Ist optional und kann von uns für den Käufer kostenlos abgeschlossen werden. Bitte bedenken Sie, dass die Angabe des tatsächlichen Werts des/der Gemälde vom Zoll yur Erhebung einer Einfuhrumsatzsteuer führen kann.
Zufriedenheitsgarantie
Ihr Gemälde wird von einem unserer talentierten Künstler individuell für Sie erstellt und wir werden Ihnen auf Wunsch digitale Fotos Ihres Bildes (Ihrer Bilder) schicken, bevor wir es (diese) an Sie verschicken. Sollten Sie nach Erhalt trotzdem nicht zufrieden sein, erstatten wir Ihnen den vollen Kaufpreis (Ohne Porto und Verpackung) nachdem Sie es uns zurück geschickt haben.
Volle Neuerstellung / Ersatzlieferung (Ohne Porto und Verpackung) für beschädigte oder zerstörte Gemälde. Bitte um Nachricht innerhalb von 3 Tagen und Rücksendung in Originalverpackung innerhalb von / Tagen nach Erhalt der Sendung.
Top 10 most expensive Paintings of the World
Museum Qualityat Affordable Price
Art Reproduction
Inspired by
Gustav Klimt
Adele Bloch-Bauer I
Auctioned
At Sotheby´s in New York
On June 19, 2006
For 135,0 Mio. Dollar
"Luck, according to the Roman dramatist Seneca, is what happens when preparation meets opportunity. If so, Los Angeles is the luckiest city in the world for Modern art right now. Preparation just met opportunity, and the stunning result is Gustav Klimt: Five Paintings From the Collection of Ferdinand and Adele Bloch-Bauer, which opened this week to a jostling media throng at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art ... As a group their power radiates outward, like ripples from a stone dropped into the pond of Modern art. At the center is the singular 1907 tour de force, Adele Bloch-Bauer I, among the greatest early Modern paintings now in the U.S. For LACMA it ranks as a destination work — the kind one travels just to see — comparable to Pablo Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon at New York's Museum of Modern Art ... "
Christopher Knight, The Los Angeles Times
"Maria Altmann says the portrait of her Auntie Adele somehow looks bigger than she remembered, as the Gustav Klimt masterpiece of a sensual lady bound in gold was unveiled here at the county art museum Tuesday, almost seven decades after it was stolen from her family by the Nazis following their march into Vienna. The story of this Klimt painting — its creation, its subject, its looting, the discovery of the theft and the legal battle to have the art returned — reads like a sweeping, romantic epic of loss and redemption, a tale that spans the hothouse salons of fin-de-siecle Vienna, the darkness of the Holocaust and the U.S. Supreme Court."
William Booth, The Washington Post
" . . . But the reluctance of the Austrian authorities is a godsend for the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, which is just starting a major renovation, by one of the Pompidou Center architects, Renzo Piano. LACMA set up the exhibit of the five Klimt paintings in a record time. And it is a stunning début for its brand new director of the museum Michael Govan, who will preside over the transformations of the cultural institution. After June 30, where will the paintings go? To the French daily newspaper Le Monde, Maria Altmann, who masters French perfectly, confirmed that she wants to sell the paintings to a museum, rather than a private collector, 'so they remain available to a large public, the way my uncle and my aunt wanted to.' She would prefer for the paintings to remain in Los Angeles, 'my home town, and
the town that welcomed me when I fled the Nazis.'"
Claudine Mulard, Le Monde
"The gold painting was originally commissioned by Mr. Bloch-Bauer, an avid art collector, for his Vienna palace. Klimt spent three painstaking years on the canvas, making hundreds of sketches for his sensual vision of Adele, her pale face at the center, her hands twisted near her face in a vulnerable gesture. (A film accompanying the exhibition reveals that Adele often twisted her hands because one finger was deformed.) Most of the canvas is covered in undulating sections of gold paint: in geometric squares and circles, Egyptian-influenced eyes and, if one looks carefully, A's and B's in gold relief."
Sharon Waxman, The New York Times
THE PAINTINGS AND THE HISTORY
VIENNA BEFORE WORLD WAR ONE
In the early years of the twentieth century, Vienna, the capital of the multinational Habsburg Empire, was a thriving metropolis enjoying what Austrians called ”the last sparkle of the imperial age,” while also leading the way into the future in every area of art and culture. It was a city with one of the world’s most vigorous music and theater scenes, a leading university, and thriving literary coffeehouses. Composers Gustav Mahler and Arnold Schoenberg, philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein, authors Arthur Schnitzler and Hugo von Hofmannsthal, and psychologist Sigmund Freud were among the many Viennese residents who were extending the boundaries of art, thought, and the human psyche.
The visual arts of the time took part in an international movement of cultural renewal, known in England as the Arts and Crafts movement, in France as Art Nouveau, and in Germany and Austria as Jugendstil (Youth Style). This graceful new style was seen everywhere in Vienna, notably in the subway stations of architect Otto Wagner and the spare geometric buildings of Adolf Loos.
Modern artists throughout Europe were breaking away from conservative official art associations to form independent artists’ collectives, or “secessions.” The Vienna Secession, of which Klimt was a prominent member, consisted of a relatively small and generally like-minded group of artists and was closely tied to the decorative arts.
GUSTAV KLIMT
Gustav Klimt was born in 1862 into an artistic Viennese family and received his education at Vienna’s School of Fine Arts. He began his career with a commission to decorate the ceiling of the grand staircase at the Burg Theater, among the most prominent Viennese buildings and the most important venue for high society. His murals for the theater combined a variety of historical references, including naturalistic portraits of the city’s most prominent citizens, and brought him awards and great prominence. A series of allegorical paintings he subsequently created for the University of Vienna, however — radical treatments of themes such as “Philosophy,” “Jurisprudence,” and "Medicine” — provoked scorn and ridicule.
Klimt turned his energies to the Vienna Secession, of which he had been a founding member. His Secessionist style departed from his earlier traditional naturalism and was based on the sinuous linearity of Jugendstil. He soon became known as the foremost portraitist of Vienna’s new upper class, primarily its female members. He depicted the wives and daughters of these wealthy families as splendid icons enfolded in luxuriant patterns. This development reached spectacular intensity in a handful of rare paintings in his “gold style.” These portraits were so labor-intensive that he averaged only one per year after 1900. Each portrait required many sketches (several hundred in the case of Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I, on which he worked from 1904 to 1907).
In contrast to these elegant renderings of the socially prominent, he also painted landscapes, devoid of any human presence, that evoked the mystery and richness of nature.
Klimt died of a stroke in Vienna in 1918, leaving numerous paintings unfinished.
Description
* inspired by the original masterpiece as described above
* Oil painting reproduction on canvas - 100% hand painted
* Unframed - Unstretched
Original Size 138 x 138 cm 429.00 Euro
* Further offered sizes:
½ of original sizes 69 x 69 cm 139.00 Euro
¾ of original sizes 104 x 104 cm 299.00 Euro
1½ of original sizes 207 x 207 cm 999.00 Euro
Dobble of original sizes 276 x 276 cm 1.599.00 Euro
Other than the suggested sizes are possible. Please send Email for quotation.
Artists
All our reproduction paintings are hand painted replica of famous artworks by our commissioned artists who are self taught or formally trained in Fine Art Schools. Some of them also create original paintings that are currently displaying in our gallery at the Art Café in Pattaya / Thailand: ()
Payment
Bank Transfer To Current Account of Citibank Braunschweig in Germany
PayPal (Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Discover, ECheck)
Please make payment within 7 days of transaction final.
Shipping & Handling
* All paintings will be shipped from Chonburi / Thailand by Registered Airmail.
* USA/Canada 30.00 Euros
* Australia/ New Zealand 25.00 Euros
* UK/Europe 25.00 Euros
* Africa 35.00 Euros
* Asia 15.00 Euros
Combined Postage Discount: 50% combined postage discount is offered for any additional item after the first purchased painting.
Shipment may also be per EMS (Express Mailing Service) of Thai Post with a delivery within 3 to 5 working days or by DHL, TNT etc
Surcharge for shipment by EMS 35,00 Euro
Surcharge for shipment by TNT, DHL or similar 75,00 Euro
Packing
The purchased painting will be rolled in a protective PVC tube.
Delivery Time
All paintings are shipped within 15 business days (3 weeks) after a valid payment is successfully received. It takes approximately 10 to 14 days for shipment by Registered Airmail from Thailand to any worldwide destinations.
Insurance
Is optional in case of lost order or damaged, customer is entitled to get reissue of a new order free of charge.
Satisfaction Guarantee - Refund Policy
Your ordered painting(s) will be painted individually for you by one of our talented artists. Digital pictures will be taken and send to you before shipment in order to obtain your approval. In case, that you are not satisfied with the artwork after receiving it, we will refund you (less shipping and handling fee). Please provide notice to return within 3 business days of receiving the artwork that should be returned within 7 days in original packing.
Full money refund (less shipping and handling fee) for any damaged or defective merchandise. Please provide notice to return within 3 business days of receiving the artwork that should be returned within 7 days in original packing.