Monday, 20 April 2026

Arnold Böcklin -part 3



Self-Portrait
oil on mahogany wood 39.5 x 31 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

Arnold Böcklin (1827-1901). Böcklin’s art had little in common with Impressionism or the academic art of his time. Instead, his depictions of demigods in naturalistic settings interpret themes from Classical mythology in an idiosyncratic, often sensual manner. In the Sea, part of a series of paintings of mythological subjects, displays an unsettling, earthy realism. Mermaids and tritons frolic in the water with a lusty energy and abandon verging on coarseness. Occupying the centre of the composition is a harp playing triton. Three mermaids have attached themselves to his huge frame as if it were a raft; the one near his shoulder seems to thrust herself upon him. The work’s sense of boisterousness is tempered by the ominously shaped reflection of the triton and mermaids in the sea and by the oddness of the large-eared heads that emerge from the water at the right. In addition to imaginative, bizarre interpretations of the Classical world, Böcklin painted mysterious landscapes punctuated by an occasional lone figure. These haunting later works made him an important contributor to the international Symbolist movement. They also appealed to some Surrealist artists, particularly Giorgio de Chirico, who declared, “Each of (Böcklin’s) works is a shock. Art Institute of Chicago, IL

Part 3 of a 3-part series on the works of Arnold Böcklin:


c1871 A sacred Grove
oil on canvas 80.5 x 103.1 cm
Bavarian State Painting Collections, Munich

1871 The Ride of Death (Autumn and Death)
oil on canvas 79 x 136.5 cm
Bavarian State Painting Collections, Munich

1872 Venus Anadyomene
oil on panel 59.1 x 45.7 cm
Saint Louis Art Museum, Missouri

1872 The Dying Cleopatra (First Version)
oil on canvas 76 x 61.5 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel
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c1872 The Painting on the Rainbow
(Fragment of a Screen)
oil on canvas, gold primed 66.9 x 64.6 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

c1872 Roman May Festival
oil on canvas 75.5 x 61 cm
Bavarian State Painting Collections, Munich

c1872 Idyll (fragment of a screen)
oil on canvas, gold primed 67.1 x 64.5 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1872/73 Portrait of Clara Böcklin, the artist's eldest daughter
tempera on canvas 105 x 77 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1872-73 Centaur Fight
oil on canvas 104.2 x 194.3 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

c1873 Astolf rides away with Orill's head
oil on canvas 54 x 77 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1873 In Springtime
oil on canvas 104,5 x 78 cm
National Gallery of Victoria, Australia

1874 Nymph on the Shoulders of Pan
tempera on panel 38.3 x 35.5 cm
Private Collection

1874 Triton and Nereid
oil on canvas 105.3 x 194 cm
Bavarian State Painting Collections, Munich

1874 Sideboard with Ceres and Bacchus
walnut a
nd oil on canvas  307.3 x 325.1 x 67.3 cm overall
Los Angeles County Museum of Art

1875 The Muse Clio
oil on canvas 105.5 x 78 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1875 Portrait of the art historian Adolph Bayersdorfer
Tempera (?) on mineral support materia 38.7 x 30 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1875 Faun, blowing the syrinx
oil on canvas 62.5 x 50 cm
Bavarian State Painting Collections, Munich

1876 Portrait of Clara Bruckmann-Böcklin, the artist's eldest daughter
 tempera (?) on fir wood 60.5 x 47 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1879 Head of a dead girl
tempera on canvas 9.5 x 17.5 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1880 Island of the Dead 

Böcklin’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. Böcklin 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 scene was widely reproduced and inspired numerous artists, including the composer Sergei Rachmaninoff and the Surrealist painter Salvador Dalí.


1880 Island of the Dead
oil on wood 73.7 x 121.9 cm 
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

1881 The Gothic Procession
medium? on canvas 100.5 x 141.5 cm
Kunstmuseum Base
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1881 Ruin by the Sea
oil on fabric 111 x 82 cm
The Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio

1882 Odysseus and Calypso
oil on mahogany wood 103.5 x 149.8 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1882 The Sacred Grove
oil on canvas 105 x 150.6 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1882-85 Fight on the Bridge
oil on mahogany wood 61 x 50 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1883 In the Sea
oil on panel 86.5 x 115 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, IL

1883 In the play of the waves
oil on canvas 180 x 238 cm
Bavarian State Painting Collections, Munich

1884 The Sanctuary of Hercules
oil on wood 113.8 x 180.5 cm
National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC

1886 The Game of the Nereids
oil on canvas 150.5 x 176.4 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1887 Shield with the head of Medusa
plaster 60.5 diameter
Kunstmuseum Basel

c1888 Sappho (Calypso)
medium? on canvas on fir wood 85.5 x 69 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1888 Vita somnium breve (Life, a brief dream)
medium? on mahogany wood 189 x 114.5 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1888 The island of Life
oil on mahogany wood 93.3 x 140.1 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1890 The Isle of the Dead
(note: very similar to the 1880 version but not actually the same)
oil on canvas 110 x 156.4 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1893 The Muse Thalia
medium? on mahogany wood 26 x 18 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1893-97 Saint Paul
brush in grey and pencil on vellum 18.8 x 14.3 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

1898 Saint Paul
resin tempera on canvas on wood 150 x 65 cm

1896 The Hunt of Diana
oil on canvas 99.5 x 200.5 cm
RMN-Grand Palais (Musée d'Orsay, Paris

1896 Odysseus and Polyphemus
oil and tempera on panel 66 x 150 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA

1897 Shield with the face of Medusa
painted papier-mâchérelief 61 cm diameter
RMN-Grand Palais (Musée d'Orsay, Paris

1898 The Plague

Arnold Böcklin dared to create a personification of the cruel plague in 1898. In the painting, a large-scale and dragon-like monster rages through the picture. A rickety grim reaper sits on top of it; he swings his weapon around seemingly at random, spreading great mischief over the streets. The eyes are hollowed out, the corners of the mouth pulled down - neither compassion nor any other human emotion can be seen in the frozen face. One can literally feel how the monster flies into the picture space and towards the viewer, so dynamically is its flight depicted.

Alexandra Tuschka


1898 The Plague
tempera on wood 149.8 x 105.1 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel

c1900 Ruin by the sea
lithograph 23.3 x 30.6 cm (plate)

c1900 Odysseus and Calypso
lithograph 24 x 31.4 cm

c1900 The Nereids
lithograph 19.7 x 31.5 cm

c1900 The island of the dead
lithograph 24 x 35.4 cm
 

c1900 Centaurs fight
lithograph 20.3 x 33.3 cm




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