A LEGO Fan Recreated Gustav Klimt’s Iconic Artwork ‘The Kiss,’ Gold Studs and All

At the start of the twentieth century, a group of Austrian artists got tired of the stuffy academic painting establishment in Vienna and broke away to form their own movement. They called it the Secession, and their unofficial leader was Gustav Klimt, a man with a gold fixation and a habit of scandalizing polite society with erotically charged, symbol-heavy paintings. The Kiss, finished in 1908, became the movement’s defining image, a couple locked in an embrace inside a cocoon of gold ornament.

More than a century later, that same image has found an unlikely new medium. Builder CYM-Create_Your_Mind has translated Klimt’s masterpiece into a LEGO mosaic spanning 44 by 44 stud compartments, deliberately built as a perfect square to honor the artist’s own preference for square canvases, right down to a detachable minifigure of Klimt himself sitting in a chair beside the piece.

Designer: CYM-Create_Your_Mind

Klimt painted most of his major works on square canvases, a stubborn formal choice that gave his compositions a strange, almost claustrophobic intimacy. The original Kiss measures 180 by 180 centimeters, and CYM-Create_Your_Mind has mirrored that exact ratio in brick form, using pearl gold pieces across the entire background to chase the effect of real gold leaf, since Klimt was known widely enough as the Painter of Gold that his contemporaries used the nickname as a compliment and an accusation in equal measure. Getting that shimmer right in LEGO, a material with all the metallic subtlety of a cereal box, is a genuinely tricky bit of engineering, and the built up layers of gold tiles and plates manage to catch light in a way flat mosaics usually cannot.

The figures share an uncanny similarity, which is rare considering LEGO tends to abstract details – here the details really aren’t lost as much as they’ve been caricatured in brick. The man’s robe is rendered in a strict, angular pattern of black rectangles, while the woman’s dress dissolves into circles and floral bursts, a distinction Klimt used deliberately to separate masculine and feminine visual language within the same golden shroud. Around 2,850 pieces went into achieving that contrast, and the level of facial detail, from the woman’s tilted head to the man’s mostly hidden profile, holds up remarkably well at mosaic resolution, which is where most brick portraits tend to fall apart into mush. My favorite touch is the tiny tile bearing a copy of Klimt’s actual signature, tucked quietly beside the figures the way it appears in the original painting, a small detail that turns a tribute into something closer to a facsimile.

CYM-Create_Your_Mind added a separate, removable minifigure of Klimt himself, seated in a chair beside his own creation. The reasoning, as the designer explains it, comes from an image of the painter sitting quietly in his studio, a symbolic gesture toward an artist who was famously private and rarely photographed working. It is a small addition that adds a layer of narrative to what could have otherwise been a straightforward wall piece.

The project is currently sitting at 759 supporters on LEGO Ideas, with 527 days left on the clock to reach the 5,000 needed to trigger an official review. Klimt fans, art history nerds, and anyone who has ever walked past a poster print of this painting in a dorm room hallway without really looking at it now have a good excuse to look twice. You can head to the LEGO Ideas page and cast your vote.