Showing posts with label Egon Schiele. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Egon Schiele. Show all posts

Sunday, May 16, 2021

Klimt / Schiele review / Their obsessions were mutual

Egon Schiele, Mujer sentada con la pierna doblada, 1917
 Národni Galarie, Praga.


Klimt / Schiele review – their obsessions were mutual


Royal Academy, London
Ferociously brilliant young Egon Schiele and established master Gustav Klimt share the spotlight in this compelling Viennese double bill


Laura Cumming

Sunday 4 November 2018 

Egon Schiele drew Gustav Klimt many times in life, but also in death. Three drawings exist of Klimt in the morgue, his handsome face deformed by a massive stroke at the age of 55. Not many months later, Schiele himself was carried off by Spanish flu in the space of three devastating days. He was 28. Both men died in Vienna in the year 1918.

Egon Schiele’s Seated Female Nude … skill and sensuality


 

Egon Schiele’s Seated Female Nude … skill and sensuality

The Austrian figurative painter brings raw sexuality and a nervy human anxiety to the surface


Skye Sherwin
Fri 14 Dec 2018 09.59 GMT


It’s getting hot in here …

Unlike the models posed as lofty goddesses and nymphs that dominate “the nude” in western art history, Schiele’s women work a nervy, very human sensuality. It speaks to our time, as much as it did the sex-conscious intellectual circles of the artist’s fin-de-siècle Vienna.

Egon Schiele’s Seated Female Nude, Elbows Resting on Right Knee, 1914.
 Photograph: The Albertina Museum, Vienna

A line crossed …

Schiele’s skill is in drawing, not painting. His women are all anxious lines, scratched out with an energy that suggests the artist’s feelings towards his subject. This is no softly lit daydream but a vigorous embrace of real flesh and bone.

No pretence …

The teasing stockings and high heels, along with the open legs, are frank about their purpose. The knowingness in the way Schiele depicts the naked body, including his own, makes his supercharged eroticism all the more unsettling.

The eyes have it …

Schiele often just depicted bodies, ignoring the heads. In this 1914 seated nude, however, the model seems to be enduring the objectification imposed by the revealing set-up. The eye contact and chin rested on a hand suggest a challenge, or boredom.






THE GUARDIAN




Staging Schiele review / Art, obsession and orgasmic yelps

Striking moments but lacks light and shade ... Staging Schiele. Photograph: Foteini Christofilopoulou

Staging Schiele review – art, obsession and orgasmic yelps

 

DanceEast, Ipswich


The expressionist aesthetics of Egon Schiele’s nudes should make for riveting dance, but Shobana Jeyasingh’s production is a bit too beige

Anna Winter
Sunday 20 October 2019

I

t’s easy to see why the work of Austrian painter Egon Schiele (1890-1918) is tempting choreographic catnip. The expressionist aesthetics of Schiele’s nudes – emotionally charged and attenuated lines, tense dynamics and oddly contorted poses – seem like a natural fit for contemporary dance. Despite this felicitous figural match, Shobana Jeyasingh’s Staging Schiele doesn’t always make for riveting dance.

Egon Schiele / Women III





Egon Schiele
WOMEN III





Egon Schiele / Women I



Egon Schiele
WOMEN I


Egon Schiele / Women II




Egon Schiele
WOMEN II


Friday, October 4, 2019

Egon Schiele / Beauty and the chasm between


 IMG 5799 
Egon Schiele, Seated Woman with Bent Knee, 1917. Narodni Gallery, Prague

Egon Schiele Beauty and the chasm between


Written by Marina Valcárcel
Published: 27 May 2018


Vienna is this year commemorating the centenary of the deaths of Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele, Otto Wagner and Koloman Moser. The celebrations kick off with a Schiele retrospective at the Leopold Museum: oils, watercolours, drawings and gouaches alongside photographs and poems. In all, over 200 breathtaking works of art divided up by theme.
Egon Schiele died at the age of 28. The Leopold Museum in Vienna, which houses the largest collection of his work in the world, is now honouring the 100th anniversay of his death with an unforgettable exhibition. In one glass display case, there is a photograph of the artist, lying on his deathbed in a white shirt, his left arm bent lazily to support his head. He would look every bit the young man snoozing in the sun were it not for the wild flowers scattered over his body. Just a few hours earlier, Schiele had finished a sketch of his wife as he watched her from this bed. Edith, pregnant with their child, has her heavy head resting on a pillow, her eyelids drooping. None of them would live. Edith was to die of Spanish flu, whilst being painted by her husband, on the 18th of October 1918. Schiele, who had also already contracted the disease, would die three days later.

Saturday, October 6, 2018

Life in Motion / Egon Schiele and Francesca Woodman review / Vulnerable beauty

Self Portrait in Crouching Position, 1913 by Egon Schiele



Life in Motion: Egon Schiele and Francesca Woodman review – vulnerable beauty


Egon Schiele and Francesca Woodman both died in their 20s. Here, their elegant images of the body under duress expose the difference between an artist’s real and invented dramas


Laura Cumming
Sunday 27 May 2018

Two images spark a flame, unexpectedly, at the start of this show. One is a self-portrait by the American photographer Francesca Woodman, in which she crouches in a shadowy room with what appears to be a gaping wound in her side. Look again, and you see that the zip of her dress is undone, exposing a gash of white skin in the darkness. The other is a drawing by Egon Schiele of an emaciated young man seen from behind, a tattered jerkin hauled over his bony arms that covers very little of his abject nakedness. Both artists use a single garment brilliantly to invoke mankind’s vulnerability, the exact condition of Lear’s poor, bare, forked animal.

Boy meets girl, that is the story of this show. And in some respects, the two are a perfect match: Egon Schiele (1890-1918), the most radical artist of the Austro-Hungarian empire, both exposed and exposing in his drawings and paintings – his self-portraits naked, agonised, with arms outflung, like crucifixions without the cross; and Francesca Woodman (1958-1981), also powerfully gifted, appearing as the subject of her own intense and enigmatic monochrome photographs.
Teenage prodigies, dead in their 20s – Woodman at 22 by her own hand, Schiele carried off by Spanish flu at 28 – they were almost equally prolific and driven. And what they seem to share, moreover, is an obsessive interest in the body under pressure, suffering, strained, taken to physical extremes: the outward expression of the inner being.




Egon Schiele’s Standing Man, 1913.
Pinterest
 Egon Schiele’s Standing Man, 1913. Photograph: Hadiye Cangökçe

Straight away this puts the emphasis fully on content. In the art of each there is the single figure, splayed, crouched, restless, hunched, bent, dangling, curled – in foetal anguish (Schiele), next to a bowl of writhing eels(Woodman) – and almost always alone, in the chilly white space of his page or the gloom of her derelict building. People collapse, lie flaccid as abandoned dolls, or sit on the floor, knees tensely pent to their chins.
Backs are turned, faces concealed, genitals exposed. Schiele’s waifs in general have nowhere to hide, except behind the odd scrap of fabric; Woodman is always hiding, clambering into the fireplace, disappearing round doors or folding herself inside flaps of old wallpaper. There is the relationship between bodies and space, and between people and their clothes. A dress, in both, may be a fragile old vestment that barely conceals the naked body beneath. But a stocking loosened pornographically in Schiele becomes a sign of forlornness in Woodman.

And so the similarities begin to dissolve. The show’s title refers to motion – registered quick as a flash in Schiele’s precise and proleptic pencil; recorded more slowly by Woodman. One of her methods was to set a long exposure time and then move ever so slightly, to get the familiar blur of 19th-century photographs. In one picture she jumps into the air, hair streaming like ectoplasm. In another, crouched down and apparently about to reach for help or fall forward, she vanishes in an anonymous frisson. Woodman is the model for all of these images, but they are by no means conventional self-portraits.
And nor are those of Egon Schiele, of course, who is seen here glowering, crouching, grimacing and in raw-red masturbation. He is a martyr, a loner, a madman tearing at his hair. Ever the victim, he finds the victim in others. It is rightly said that his nubile girls and boys may be naked but they are never erotic, partly because every position they find themselves in involves such conspicuous discomfort. And to his fiercely beautiful line, so incisive and agile, describing the angular contours of each figure, comes the overlay of watercolour that makes his sitters appear mottled, bruised, exhausted, ill with those arsenical green patches.




Untitled, Providence, Rhode Island, 1976 by Francesca Woodman.
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 Untitled, Providence, Rhode Island, 1976 by Francesca Woodman. Photograph: Courtesy of Charles Woodman/Estate of Francesca Woodman

And yet, of course, they are all so elegant. This is Schiele’s unique invention, this combination of stylishness and suffering. And perhaps Woodman has a little of it too, for there is a touch of the fashion plate about her appearance in vintage clothes, with calla lily, with furs or velvet shoes. She even sent her work to fashion magazines, which rejected her at the time but have been in her debt, somewhat, ever since.
If Schiele had drawn Woodman she might have fitted right into his art; the question is what she took from him. Certain juxtapositions in this show – of poses and expressions – suggest that she had looked hard at his work. Unfortunately the catalogue, unusually weak for a Tate publication, has nothing to say about this.
Walls and galleries alternate between the two artists, and alas the to and fro begins to pall. Woodman’s highly original metaphor of the house-haunting woman starts to look repetitive after 50 variations, which is quite unfair, given that most of this work was made at the age of 21.
What inevitably fascinates far more is the spectacle of Schiele’s graphic genius. His lexicon of marks, for instance: an L, superbly placed to indicate a shoulder blade; an I, magically indicating the back crook of a knee; the way his whiplash line deepens, with charcoal, into something resembling litho; his use of ladders to draw reclining figures from above, upending the page so that they appear even more estranged; his use of brown paper and white watercolour to bring a face hurtling out of the past. There are almost 50 works here, borrowed from around the world, some of them rarely seen in Britain, and each with this phenomenally powerful register.
The whole show is theatre. Woodman hanging herself, as it seems, by knot of her own hair, or disguised in the bark of a tree; Schiele gaunt and staring, bony fingers knotted over his crotch, or drawing the thin, uneasy faces of children persuaded into his studio from the street. But what Woodman performs, in person, is a kind of invented melodrama of evolving scenarios. Schiele sees and draws, instead, the involuntary drama within. He does not make it up.




Untitled, Rome, Italy, 1977-8 by Francesca Woodman.
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 Untitled, Rome, Italy, 1977-8 by Francesca Woodman. Photograph: © Courtesy of Charles Woodman/Estate of Francesca Woodman