Secession
The Secession is where Vienna's rebel artists made their stand in 1897, breaking away from stuffy academic traditions to create Austria's answer to Art Nouveau.
About Secession
The Secession is where Vienna's rebel artists made their stand in 1897, breaking away from stuffy academic traditions to create Austria's answer to Art Nouveau. The striking white cube building with its golden dome of laurel leaves houses Gustav Klimt's extraordinary 34-meter Beethoven Frieze in the basement, a swirling masterpiece of symbolism and sensuality that wraps around an entire room. Upstairs, rotating contemporary exhibitions fill the stark white galleries that were revolutionary for their time.
You'll enter through the main hall where temporary shows occupy the clean, minimalist spaces the Secession artists designed to let art breathe. The real magic happens when you descend to the basement Beethoven Frieze room, where Klimt's golden figures seem to dance along the walls behind protective glass. The frieze tells the story of humanity's search for happiness through three panels, and you can spend ages decoding the symbolism while other visitors whisper around you in the dimly lit space.
Most guides oversell the building's exterior drama but undersell how intimate the Klimt experience actually feels. Entry costs €11 for adults, €8.50 for students, and the whole visit takes about an hour unless you're a serious Klimt obsessive. Skip the audio guide and just absorb the frieze naturally. The temporary exhibitions upstairs can be hit or miss, so don't feel obligated to spend equal time on both floors.
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