Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

The Garden of Death

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Year
  
1896

Location
  
Ateneum, Helsinki

Created
  
1896

Type
  
Watercolor and gouache

Artist
  
Hugo Simberg

The Garden of Death httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Dimensions
  
16 cm × 17 cm (6.3 in × 6.7 in)

Similar
  
Hugo Simberg artwork, Other artwork

The garden of death blasphemer


The Garden of Death (Finnish: Kuoleman puutarha) (1896) is a painting by Finnish symbolist painter Hugo Simberg. Like many of Simberg's paintings, it depicts a gloomy, otherworldly scene. The central figures are reminiscent of the classic black-clad Grim Reaper, but paradoxically are tending to gardens; traditionally symbols of birth or renewal.

The Garden of Death is one of the few paintings whose symbolism Simberg explained; typically he preferred to let viewers come to their own conclusions. In a note on one sketch he described the garden as "the place where the dead end up before going to Heaven". Simberg's juxtaposition of the traditionally frightening imagery of death with the tenderness and humor of his portrayal invite the viewer to consider mortality in a new light.

The painting was a favourite subject of Simberg's and he made several versions using different techniques, including larger fresco version of the painting in the Tampere Cathedral, which also contains other works by Simberg.

References

The Garden of Death Wikipedia