Island of the Dead
Böcklin’s patron Marie Berna commissioned this painting in 1880 as a memorial to her late husband. It is based on an unfinished canvas that she saw in the artist’s studio in Florence; at her request, he added the draped coffin and the shrouded figure to the rowboat in the foreground. Böcklin later wrote to her, "you will be able to dream yourself into the world of dark shadows." Between 1883 and 1886, he painted three additional versions of the subject, each slightly different. The scene was widely reproduced and inspired numerous artists, including the composer Sergei Rachmaninoff and the Surrealist painter Salvador Dalí.
Artwork Details
- Title: Island of the Dead
- Artist: Arnold Böcklin (Swiss, Basel 1827–1901 San Domenico, Italy)
- Date: 1880
- Medium: Oil on wood
- Dimensions: 29 x 48 in. (73.7 x 121.9 cm)
- Classification: Paintings
- Credit Line: Reisinger Fund, 1926
- Object Number: 26.90
- Curatorial Department: European Paintings
Audio
6272. Island of the Dead
ALISON HOKANSON:
It was said that there was an image of “The Island of the Dead” in every middle-class home in Germany. Sigmund Freud apparently had a version of it in his office.
NARRATOR:
What made this painting so popular and widely reproduced?
Unlike his Impressionist contemporaries—who painted directly from nature—Böcklin created dream-like, fantastical scenes. Curator Alison Hokanson:
ALISON HOKANSON:
He’s taken inspiration from nature, in this case the Italian and Mediterranean landscape, but he’s transformed what he saw into an imaginary setting with deeper symbolic meaning.
NARRATOR:
Look at the shrouded figure accompanying a coffin in the rowboat, the tomb-like structures in the cliffs, and the dark cypress trees. They allude to death, mourning, and the afterlife. In addressing these themes, Böcklin appealed to the late-19th century fascination with spirits, séances, and mortality.
ALISON HOKANSON:
It addresses the ultimate mystery, the passage from life into death. And it takes us up to the very brink. We don’t know what awaits the figure in the boat, once they alight onto the island.
NARRATOR:
The cliffs and the boat appear dramatically spot-lit, while the rest of the picture is in shadow.
ALISON HOKANSON:
Böcklin has composed the picture like a stage set, so we’re able to project ourselves into the scene.
NARRATOR:
Perhaps this theatrical quality helps to explain why this scene struck a chord with playwrights, film directors, and composers.
[MUSIC begins: Rachmaninoff’s Isle of the Dead]
Here’s an excerpt from Rachmaninoff’s 1909 “Isle of the Dead,” a piece inspired by Böcklin’s image.
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