KARL WILLHELM DIEFENBACH 1851, Hadamar-1913, Isola di Capri
Aragonese Castle of Baia, 1910 c.
Oil on canvas
100 x 150 cm
105 x 156 x 5 cm (with the frame)
105 x 156 x 5 cm (with the frame)
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Literature
Karl Wilhelm Diefenbach (Hadamar 1851 – Capri 1913), catalogue of an exhibition held at the Galleria Emporio Floreale, Rome 1979, p. 12.
Born in 1851 in Hadamar, in the Grand Duchy of Hesse and by Rhine, Diefenbach moved to Munich in 1872 where he enrolled at the Academy of Art. The artist’s life was a constant tussle against the constraints and contradictions of his homeland’s bourgeois society, and he was to become one of the chief representatives of nudism, vegetarianism, and naturism in an incessant search for a primitive, primordial religiosity aimed at rediscovering the archaic relationship between Man and Nature. His unconventional philosophy of life would become a model for the founding in the early 20th century of the Community of Monte Verità [“Mountain of Truth”] near Ascona in the Canton of Ticino (Switzerland), where intellectuals and artists from all over Europe shared a lifestyle far-removed from the political and social context of the time, one which allowed them to enjoy a spiritual and intellectual freedom in perfect harmony with nature. In the early years of the 20th century, to escape the attacks of the press and bourgeois bigotry of the time, Diefenbach left Germany. He was to stay for short periods around Lake Garda, then in Cairo, and Trieste. In 1900, the artist settled on the island of Capri. Here he found his ideal dimension, leading the life of a primitive native.
In 1975, a museum was dedicated to him inside the Charterhouse of San Giacomo, again on Capri. The 31 works kept at the Museum enable a reconstruction of the figurative path of the artist’s latter production – “a symbolist visionary linked to the romantic sentiment of nature and imbued with theosophical content”[1] – while at the same time, through their mystical and dreamlike vision of Capri, representing a testimony of the artist’s existential experience (theosophy, vegetarianism, nudism), which made him a real celebrity. Capri, lush and hospitable, yet mysterious and unsettling, evoked that feeling of the sublime which he sought and recreated in his works.
These are large canvases painted with colours which are sometimes bright, other times gloomy, and they represent mythical places on the island in an unreal way, landscapes made arcane by a sense of solitude, and mystical or symbolic scenes.
In the painting presented here, the artist depicts the Aragonese Castle of Baia, an imposing Renaissance fortress located in Bacoli, in the Campi Flegrei area, perched atop a tuff promontory 51 meters above sea level, commanding the entire Gulf of Pozzuoli. Built at the end of the 15th century by the Aragonese on the remains of a magnificent Roman villa traditionally attributed to Julius Caesar, the structure is renowned today both for its impregnable military architecture and for housing the extraordinarily rich Archaeological Museum of the Campi Flegrei. A masterpiece of Renaissance military architecture, the castle was designed in the late 15th century (from 1492 onward) by the celebrated Sienese architect Francesco di Giorgio Martini, commissioned by King Alfonso II of Aragon. The structure combines the rigorous defensive engineering of its time with remarkable spatial and landscape harmony.
The complex is distinguished by its massive battered walls of local yellow tuff, articulated with grey piperno stone moldings and reinforced by angular polygonal bastions, conceived to eliminate blind spots through interlocking fields of fire. Expanded and modified during the viceregal period (16th century) under the direction of Don Pedro de Toledo, the castle unites the austere defensive efficiency of its ramparts with the spatial elegance of courtyards, loggias, and spectacular parade grounds overlooking the sea.

In the painting, an intense, visionary light carves out the silhouette of the building dominating the coastline, endowing the scene with an aura suspended between reality and apparition. As in a dream or a Symbolist revelation, the Aragonese Castle of Baia rises from the promontory enveloped in dark, incandescent brushstrokes, while a dawn glow strikes its architectural mass, isolating it from the surrounding landscape. It is as though only that fortress, set upon the summit of the hill, were capable of catching the first rays of the sun, escaping the darkness that still holds the world below in its grip.
The palette, built upon deep and vibrant chromatic tones — from burnt earths and ferruginous reds to smoky browns and sudden bursts of light — contributes to the creation of an atmosphere of intense emotional tension. The shadows, dense and vaporous, seem to dissolve contours into a mobile painterly substance, traversed by abrupt shifts in light that heighten the dramatic and theatrical character of the composition.
In this vision of the Aragonese Castle, Diefenbach does not merely depict a real place, but transforms it into an interior image charged with spiritual and symbolic meaning. The architecture becomes an almost mystical presence, an emblem of elevation and isolation, while the landscape is transfigured into a space of the soul, dominated by a restless, cosmic nature. The overall effect is that of a profoundly oneiric scene, in which light and darkness, matter and vision, confront one another in a precarious and magnetic balance, characteristic of the artist’s Symbolist sensibility.
[1] Angela Tecce, Karl Wilhelm Diefenbach nella Certosa di San Giacomo a Capri