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Serena Pulitzer Lederer (1867–1943)

Gustav Klimt1899

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Metropolitan Museum of Art
New York City, United States

Beautiful and stylish, Serena Pulitzer Lederer was a star of turn-of-the-century Viennese society. For this portrait, commissioned by her husband, the industrialist August Lederer, Klimt employed soft, sinuous brushstrokes to present Serena as an apparition in white. "An upright flower, long-stemmed … like a black tulip," enthused one critic when the painting was shown in 1901 at the tenth exhibition of the Vienna Secession—a group founded by Klimt and other artists four years earlier, with the aim of putting the city at the forefront of the international art world. The Lederers subsequently formed the finest collection of Klimt’s work in private hands.

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  • Title: Serena Pulitzer Lederer (1867–1943)
  • Creator: Gustav Klimt
  • Date Created: 1899
  • Physical Dimensions: 75 1/8 x 33 5/8 in. (190.8 x 85.4 cm)
  • Signature: Signed (lower right): GVS.TAV / KLIMT·
  • Medium: Oil on canvas
  • Credit Line: Purchase, Wolfe Fund, and Rogers and Munsey Funds, Gift of Henry Walters, and Bequests of Catharine Lorillard Wolfe and Collis P. Huntington, by exchange, 1980
  • Accession Number: 1980.412
The Metropolitan Museum of Art

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