Exhibition "Klimt. Pigment & Pixel", Lower Belvedere Vienna, 2025. Photo: Virgil Widrich

Exhibition "Klimt. Pigment & Pixel", Lower Belvedere Vienna, 2025. Photo: Virgil Widrich

Exhibition "Klimt. Pigment & Pixel", Lower Belvedere Vienna, 2025. Photo: Virgil Widrich

Exhibition "Klimt. Pigment & Pixel", Lower Belvedere Vienna, 2025. Photo: Virgil Widrich

Exhibition "Klimt. Pigment & Pixel", Lower Belvedere Vienna, 2025. Photo: Virgil Widrich

Exhibition "Klimt. Pigment & Pixel", Lower Belvedere Vienna, 2025. Photo: Virgil Widrich

Exhibition "Klimt. Pigment & Pixel", Lower Belvedere Vienna, 2025. Photo: Virgil Widrich

Klimt. Pigment & Pixel – Rediscovering Art Through Technology

The exhibition "Gustav Klimt. Pigment & Pixel" at the Belvedere Vienna combines art and technology, offering new insights into Klimt's painting techniques. checkpointmedia developed the exhibition design, where originals, technological analyses, and digital reconstructions are presented in three sections.
The first section focuses on scientific analysis. Radiological examinations reveal hidden details beneath Klimt's layers of paint. Transparent image carriers and cool blue lighting evoke the atmosphere of a laboratory and the precision of modern analytical methods.
Another room is dedicated to Klimt's legendary gold tones. The exhibition explores how he applied gold leaf to his canvases and the techniques he used. Centered around the iconic painting "Judith I", the space creates the feeling of a treasure chamber, making Klimt's gilding techniques tangible.
The digital reconstructions of the three Faculty Paintings, lost in 1945, presented a particular design challenge. Originally intended for the ceiling of the Great Hall at the University of Vienna, the paintings were never installed. In collaboration with Google Arts & Culture, their original colours were reconstructed using artificial intelligence. The images are suspended from the ceiling, while a mirrored table allows visitors to experience them in reflection, as they would have appeared in their intended setting.
The final section highlights Klimt's nature depictions. Reproductions of his floral motifs line the walls, leading the eye to the adjacent garden—a direct connection between Klimt’s artistic inspiration and the natural world.

Lower Belvedere, Vienna
20 February – 7 September 2025
Curator: Franz Smola
Assistant Curator: Miroslav Halák
Exhibition Design: checkpointmedia GmbH / Marc Schuran, Virgil Widrich
Graphic Design: Marc Schuran
Multimedia Content: checkpointmedia GmbH
Animations: Oleg Prodeus
Exhibition Management: Agathe Boruszczak
Implementation Planning and Exhibition Construction: mac. brand spaces / Martin Reiter-Bauer, Bruno Beil
Technological Analysis: Stefanie Jahn, Barbara Steiner
Conservation: Janos Korenyi, Franziska Marinovic, Matthias Müller, Ana Stefaner, Bettina Urban
Installation: Christoph Gruber, Christian Kochmann, Johannes Stacher,
Michael Krupica, Fairtects / Thomas Nadj,
Lighting: Patrick Rosendorfsky
Art Mediation: Michaela Höß, Julia Haimburger, Katalin Várdai
Exhibition Texts: Julia Haimburger, Franz Smola, Katalin Várdai
Translation: Laura Freeburn
In cooperation with: Uniqa

Media Partners: ORF, Parnass
Special thanks to: Google Arts & Culture