
- Title The Garden of Death (Kuoleman puutarha)
- Artist Hugo Gerhard Simberg (Finnish Symbolist painter, watercolourist and graphic artist; Hamina, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire, 24 June 1873 - Ähtäri, 12 July 1917; pupil of Akseli Gallen-Kallela)
- Year of creation 1896 (one of the most beloved icons of Finnish Symbolism and Simberg's signature subject, made when he was twenty-three years old, two years after he began studying under Akseli Gallen-Kallela. The composition depicts three skeletal black-clad figures of Death, tenderly tending and watering a row of potted plants in a small enclosed garden — a sweetly humorous, almost childlike inversion of the conventional terrifying Grim Reaper, who here is recast as a quiet gentle gardener. Simberg, who was almost always reluctant to explain the symbolism of his work, made an exception for this picture: he noted on a preparatory sketch that the garden is "the place where the dead end up before going to Heaven." Each potted plant is a human soul awaiting transition into the afterlife — the implication being that humans in their earthly form are as undeveloped compared with their paradisiacal selves as a child is compared with an adult. The image was a lifelong favourite of Simberg's, who returned to it in several versions and techniques, most famously in a large fresco painted in 1905-1906 on the south wall of the Tampere Cathedral, where he was commissioned alongside Gallen-Kallela to decorate the new church and where his Wounded Angel — voted Finland's "national painting" in a 2006 Ateneum public vote — also appears. The Ateneum's watercolour is the earliest and smallest version)
- Technique/Medium Watercolour and gouache on paper
- Original dimensions Ateneum Art Museum, Finnish National Gallery, Helsinki (inventory number A II 968:16)
- Collection/Museum Ateneum Art Museum, Finnish National Gallery, Helsinki (inventory number A II 968:16)Ateneum Art Museum, Finnish National Gallery, Helsinki (inventory number A II 968:16)
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