
Hilma Af Klint Exhibition The Ten Largest Nr 3
The Ten Largest Nr 3 marks the transition into youth within Klint's ambitious series, and the palette shifts accordingly — deeper, more saturated, the forms growing taller and more defined. Spiralling motifs in violet and gold reach upward against a field of warm amber, evoking aspiration and the gathering of inner life. The composition moves with a slow, upward energy that feels both personal and universal. Painted in 1907, it belongs to one of the most quietly radical bodies of work in early twentieth-century art, created entirely outside the mainstream art world of its time.
Canvas is the natural home for Klint's bold, gestural colour — the woven texture adds warmth and physical presence that honours the scale she originally intended. Hand-produced in Berlin with archival pigment inks for colour that endures.
The Ten Largest Nr 3 marks the transition into youth within Klint's ambitious series, and the palette shifts accordingly — deeper, more saturated, the forms growing taller and more defined. Spiralling motifs in violet and gold reach upward against a field of warm amber, evoking aspiration and the gathering of inner life. The composition moves with a slow, upward energy that feels both personal and universal. Painted in 1907, it belongs to one of the most quietly radical bodies of work in early twentieth-century art, created entirely outside the mainstream art world of its time.
Canvas is the natural home for Klint's bold, gestural colour — the woven texture adds warmth and physical presence that honours the scale she originally intended. Hand-produced in Berlin with archival pigment inks for colour that endures.
Original: $38.84
-65%$38.84
$13.59Description
The Ten Largest Nr 3 marks the transition into youth within Klint's ambitious series, and the palette shifts accordingly — deeper, more saturated, the forms growing taller and more defined. Spiralling motifs in violet and gold reach upward against a field of warm amber, evoking aspiration and the gathering of inner life. The composition moves with a slow, upward energy that feels both personal and universal. Painted in 1907, it belongs to one of the most quietly radical bodies of work in early twentieth-century art, created entirely outside the mainstream art world of its time.
Canvas is the natural home for Klint's bold, gestural colour — the woven texture adds warmth and physical presence that honours the scale she originally intended. Hand-produced in Berlin with archival pigment inks for colour that endures.























