My favourite painting: Wilfred Emmanuel-Jones

Farmer and entrepreneur Wilfred Emmanuel-Jones on The Three Ages of Woman by Klimt.

Wilfred Emmanuel-Jones on detail from The Three Ages of Woman by Gustav Klimt

‘This particular portion of Klimt’s larger The Three Ages of Woman has the power to connect me to a part of my soul that is usually buried. I think we all subconsciously wish for this moment. For me, it conjures up serenity, tenderness and peace.

‘The flowers and colours give it a romantic glow — of something always out of reach. As a child of the Windrush Generation, I was left with relatives when I was six months old and I didn’t see my Mum again until I was five.

‘Although now in my sixties, that fundamental bond was broken, never mending, and this image takes me back to a place of yearning.’

Wilfred Emmanuel-Jones is a farmer and the founder of The Black Farmer range of food products.

Charlotte Mullins comments on The Three Ages of Woman

In The Three Ages of Woman, a naked woman with flaming hair studded with flowers stands holding a sleeping infant. Her head is bowed so it rests on top of the baby girl’s.

A transparent veil swirls around their legs and discs of blue and gold occupy the spaces between their slender limbs. Next to them, an older naked figure stands in profile, her breasts sagging, her stomach distended. The woman’s head is bowed, hair falling in waves so we cannot see her face. She clutches her brow in sorrow, her shoulders hunched, her hands landscaped with veins. She stands in front of a patterned surface that simultaneously resembles trees, geological strata and textile design.

Recommended videos for you

All the women in The Three Ages of Woman have their eyes closed or obscured. Vienna saw the publication of Sigmund Freud’s Interpretation of Dreams in 1899 and many popular plays and poems took the unconscious as their subject. Klimt similarly takes us into a dreamlike world, where figures float untethered from reality.

This painting was completed in 1905, the year Klimt resigned as the founding president of the Vienna Secession. The Secession had put Austrian art on the map and provided artists with a place to exhibit their exciting new variants of Modernism.

Klimt’s own style had developed rapidly from traditional fin-de-siècle portraiture to a dramatic flattening of the picture plane. His female sitters fused with the decorated rooms and patterned gowns that surrounded them, only their faces retaining any semblance of naturalism.


My favourite painting: Orlando Rock

Orlando Rock, chairman of Christie's, chooses The Adoration of the Magi by Jacopo Bassano.

My Favourite Painting: Luke Edward Hall

Designer and writer Luke Edward Hall chooses an image painted by a charismatic dandy known as ‘Bunty’.

My favourite painting: Dr Kate Pretty

Dr Kate Pretty, founder of the Young Archaeologists' Club and former principal of Homerton College, Cambridge, chooses Gulf Women Prepare

My favourite painting: Tug Rice

New York based artist Tug Rice chooses St George and the Dragon by Leonhard Beck.

My favourite painting: Richard Anderson

Tailor Richard Anderson picks an image of a smartly-dressed gentleman.

My Favourite Painting: Virginia Chadwyck-Healey

Stylist and writer Virginia Chadwyck-Healey chooses an image that she first came across during lockdown.

My favourite painting: Annie Sloan

The author and paint company founder loves this Cubism-inspired still life for its colour and contradiction.

My favourite painting: Rana Begum

Bangladeshi artist Rana Begum chooses Hand Inside by Ellie MacGarry.

My Favourite Painting: Laurence Cumming

Laurence Cumming chooses one of the few works attributed with certainty to Johannes Vermeer.