Egon Schiele: The Radical Nude

  • LONDON, United Kingdom
  • /
  • January 04, 2015

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Egon Schiele (1890-1918) Two Girls Embracing (Friends), 1915 Gouache, watercolour and pencil 48 x 32.7 cm Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest

The Courtauld Gallery is presenting the first major museum exhibition in over 20 years of one of the 20th Century’s most exceptional artists, Egon Schiele (1890-1918). A central figure of Viennese art in the turbulent years around the First World War, Schiele rose to prominence alongside his avant-garde contemporaries, such as Gustav Klimt and Oskar Kokoschka. He produced some of the most radical depictions of the human figure created in modern times, reinventing the subject for the 20th Century. The exhibition, through January 18, 2015, charts Schiele’s short but transformative career through one of his most important subjects – his extraordinary drawings and watercolours of male and female nudes.


Egon Schiele: The Radical Nude concentrates on the artist’s drawings and watercolours. It brings together an outstanding selection of works that highlight Schiele’s technical virtuosity, highly original vision and uncompromising depiction of the naked figure. This sharply focused exhibition will be a unique opportunity to see thirty-eight of these radical works drawn from both international museums and private collections, with many works shown in the United Kingdom for the first time.

Schiele arrived in Vienna in 1906, aged just sixteen, to train as an artist. He quickly
proved his precocious talent and the following year sought out Klimt, the leader of
Vienna’s Secessionist group of avant-garde artists and designers, who became a
mentor to the young artist. Schiele’s early work could not have prepared the art
establishment for the extraordinary breakthrough that he made in 1910 when he began
to draw the figure in an entirely new way and the subject of the nude took on an
increasingly important role.

This exhibition will begin with a rich selection of nudes from this seminal year, including
a number of Schiele’s powerful nude self-portraits, demonstrating how his approach
was closely tied to his introspective examination of his physical and psychological
make-up. The main section will explore his provocative nudes of the next nine years
when he pushed artistic conventions through his direct expression of human
experience, fears and desires. The works are bound up with themes of self-expression,
procreation, sexuality and eroticism. These were fertile concerns in the socially and
psychologically charged atmosphere of pre-war Vienna.

Schiele overturned and transformed old traditions of art school life drawing classes
with his raw and unidealised approach to the nude. Rather than just depict
conventional artists’ models in familiar poses, he took as his subjects an unusual
variety of people including himself, his sister, male friends, his lovers and wife, female
prostitutes, pregnant women and babies observed in a medical clinic, and a number of
young female models. Schiele’s subjects often act out a striking body language,
assuming expressive or painfully twisted poses, his models frequently explicit in their
nudity. Many of these works affronted contemporary Austrian standards of morality and
were considered pornographic by some. In 1912 Schiele was even imprisoned for two
months for contravening public decency. Today, these works are celebrated for
challenging outmoded conventions of the nude in high art of the period and for
investing the genre with a new and distinctly modern relevance.

The last part of the exhibition will look at works from Schiele’s final years before his
untimely death in 1918 from Spanish influenza, aged just 28. An important aspect of all
these works is Schiele’s unique draughtsmanship, which the exhibition explores
through the development of his technique and approach to the medium that he made
so distinctively his own. Egon Schiele: The Radical Nude will also be an opportunity to reflect upon Schiele’s wide-ranging influence on the course of modern art that still
resonates today.

Tags: european art

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