Fernand Khnopff
Fernand Edmond Jean Marie Khnopff (12 September 1858 – 12 November 1921) was a Belgian symbolist painter and one of the founding members of the avant-garde group Les XX in 1883. He was a leading figure in the Symbolist movement, and achieved international recognition for his enigmatic paintings that explored themes of isolation, desire, and the duality of woman as both femme fatale and angelic ideal. His sister Marguerite was a frequent subject, appearing in numerous portraits throughout his career.Khnopff's work bridged Continental Symbolism and British Pre-Raphaelitism. He cultivated close friendships with Edward Burne-Jones and other British artists, and from 1895 served as Brussels correspondent for the influential art journal ''The Studio'', reporting on artistic developments in Belgium and continental Europe. His paintings, particularly ''Caress of the Sphinx'' (1896), exerted considerable influence on the Vienna Secession, notably on Gustav Klimt, after Khnopff exhibited 21 works at the Secession's first exhibition in 1898.
Khnopff also designed theater sets and opera costumes, collaborating with director Max Reinhardt and staging productions at Brussels' Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie. From 1900, he devoted himself to designing an elaborate home and studio in Brussels that functioned as a gesamtkunstwerk embodying his motto "On a que soi" (One has but oneself). The house, inspired by the Vienna Secession and featuring a studio with a golden circle inscribed on white mosaic flooring, served as a "Temple of the self" until his death in 1921. Provided by Wikipedia
1
Published 2003
Other Authors:
“...Khnopff, Fernand...”
Book


