Hexagram 22: Bi -

Fine Art
Klimt — The Kiss

Klimt — The Kiss

Klimt (Unknown)

Klimt created this Symbolist work during his 'Golden Period', using gold leaf and decorative patterns inspired by Byzantine mosaics. The painting depicts an embracing couple on a flower-filled meadow, their bodies adorned with elaborate geometric and organic ornamentation. The decorative surface treatment transforms the intimate scene into a highly stylized composition.

Practical Integration

Two lovers embrace on a meadow strewn with flowers, their bodies wrapped in elaborate patterns of gold leaf. Gustav Klimt created this work during his Golden Period, transforming the intimate scene into a shimmering mosaic of geometric and organic decoration. The man's robe bears severe rectangular forms; the woman's gown flows with circular floral patterns. Gold transforms flesh into ornament, private feeling into public spectacle. The I-Ching calls this Bì (賁), Grace—a character suggesting adornment, decoration, the surface that makes content visible. The hexagram shows Mountain (Gèn) above Fire (Lí): stillness resting over clarity and light. In ancient practice, this configuration appeared when form mattered, when ceremony enhanced substance, when beauty served truth. But the text treats grace with caution—decoration can reveal essential nature or obscure it. Klimt's gold leaf both celebrates the embrace and distances the viewer from the bodies beneath. Klimt created this Symbolist work during his 'Golden Period', using gold leaf and decorative patterns inspired by Byzantine mosaics. The painting depicts an embracing couple on a flower-filled meadow, their bodies adorned with elaborate geometric and organic ornamentation. The decorative surface treatment transforms the intimate scene into a highly stylized composition. The Judgment text speaks carefully: \"Grace has success. In small matters it is favorable to undertake something.\" Grace succeeds in minor affairs, in social ceremony, in aesthetic refinement. But the text limits its scope—grace is not the solution to fundamental problems. Ancient diviners knew that decoration could smooth social friction, that ritual could restore harmony in small disputes, that beauty could make truth palatable. But grace alone cannot address structural flaws. Klimt painted passion as pattern, making feeling acceptable to Viennese patrons who purchased it for their walls. The Image Text offers a crucial distinction: \"Fire at the foot of the mountain: the image of Grace. Thus does the superior man proceed when clearing up current affairs. But he dare not decide controversial issues in this way.\" Use grace for daily matters, ceremony for small occasions. But when stakes are high, when truth is contested, when fundamental questions arise, decoration becomes dangerous. In the I-Ching sequence, Grace follows Biting Through: after removing the obstruction through force, grace smooths the remaining roughness. The next hexagram is Splitting Apart, when surface beauty can no longer conceal underlying decay.

References & Citations

  1. The Kiss — Klimt-Unknown. Klimt created this Symbolist work during his 'Golden Period', using gold leaf and decorative patterns inspired by Byzantine mosaics. The painting depicts an embracing couple on a flower-filled meadow, their bodies adorned with elaborate geometric and organic ornamentation. The decorative surface treatment transforms the intimate scene into a highly stylized composition.

The Judgment

Grace has success. In small matters it is favorable to undertake something. Beauty brings success when it serves substance, not when it replaces it.

adorn
hēngfulfillment
xiǎo(a
worth(while)
yǒu(to
yōusomewhere
wǎngto go

The Image

Fire at the foot of the mountain: the image of Grace. Thus the superior man proceeds when clearing up current affairs, but he dare not decide controversial issues in this way. Use aesthetic form for minor matters; use greater earnestness for important decisions.

shān(a
xiàbelow
yǒuis
huǒ(a
adornment
jūn(a
young one
accordingly
míngclarifies
shù(a) (great) many
zhèngpolicies
without
gǎnpresume(ption)(s)
zhé(to
legal recourse

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1賁其趾舍車而徒

adorn
these
zhǐfeet
shědismiss
chē(the) carriage
érand (so
go on foot

Line 2賁其須

adorn
one's (own)
beard

Line 3賁如濡如永貞吉

elegant
so
dripping (wet)
so
yǒng(with) last
zhēnpersistence
(is) promising

Line 4賁如皤如白馬翰如匪寇婚媾

elegant
so
(to be) (of) pure
so
bái(and
horse(man)
hànwinged
as if
fěi(it
kòu(a
hūn(but) (a) marital
gòusuitor

Line 5賁于丘園束帛戔戔吝終吉

adorned
amidst
qiū(the) hill(sides
yuán(and) (in) gardens
shù(a
(of) silk(s)
jiān(is) (a
jiānremnant
lìnembarrass
zhōng(but) in
promising

Line 6白賁無咎

bái(plain) white
adornment
(is) no
jiùblame

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Fire (☲) sits below, Mountain (☶) sits above—fire breaking from earth's depths, illuminating the mountain.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

The classical text notes that grace is necessary in union but is not the essential thing—only ornament, to be used sparingly and in little things. In fire trigram, yielding line makes two strong lines beautiful; in mountain trigram, strong line leads.

Character Analysis

Heavy Metal embodies this hierarchy: narrative substance (strong lines) beautified by visual artistry (yielding line), with both transformed through union. The stories work; the art makes them unforgettable.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Fire

Upper Trigram

Mountain

Binary

101001

Energy State

Form beautifying substance. Read bottom to top: fire's illumination below, mountain's stability above.

Trigram Symbolism

☶ Mountain (Upper) - Stillness, stability ☲ Fire (Lower) - Illumination, beauty Fire at the mountain's foot—light that beautifies but doesn't shine far.

For the classical Wilhelm translation and line-by-line commentary, see Wilhelm Translation.