
A few days after the closing of the exhibition Klimt.The Secession and Italy, from Thursday 24 to Sunday 27 March, the opening hours will be extended until midnight (last admission one hour earlier).
The exhibition, which continues to record an extraordinary success with the public, with 230 thousand visitors, presents great masterpieces exceptionally loaned by the Belvedere Museum in Vienna, by the Klimt Foundation and by public and private collections such as the Neue Galerie Graz, has been able to involve the visitors who have immediately the strong fascination of the great Austrian painter, representative of the Viennese Secession.
Klimt and the artists of his circle are represented by over 200 works including paintings, drawings, period posters and sculptures. The exhibition offers the public Klimt's masterpieces such as the famous Judith I (1901), the Lady in White (1917-18), Friends I (The Sisters) (1907) and Amalie Zuckerkandl (1917-18). Very exceptional loans were also granted, such as The bride (1917-18), which left the Klimt Foundation for the first time, and Portrait of a Lady (1916-17), stolen from the Ricci Oddi Modern Art Gallery in Piacenza in 1997 and recovered in 2019.
Photo credits: courtesy of Palazzo Braschi official site
