Portraiture of Egon Schiele
Portraiture of Egon Schiele
Portraiture of Egon Schiele
HALLEY CURLIS
This paper was written for Dr. Joiners Art of the Ninteenth Century course.
17
The Portraiture of Egon Schiele
through deft lines and saturated colors. Although they are usu-
ally depicted in a sexually explicit and even perverse manner,
they are not pornographic because they were not created exclu-
sively to be sexually provocative.
As Schiele aged, his portraiture matured, and he moved
away from the overt sexuality of his earlier works. He began to
explore the nature of personality and the connections of his sub-
jects to their surroundings. He moved away from the expres-
sionist way in which he had earlier worked, settling on a calmer
style (Riedl, 354). Of this period Werkner comments:
From 1912 onwards, Schieles drawings place increas
ing emphasis on concrete reality; in portrait drawings,
for example, there is a clearer concern with the external
physiognomy of the sitters. All in all, these changes
were the prelude to a line of development which led to
the considerably more realistic manner of Schieles last
years (Cited by Schrder and Szeemann, 39).
This new manner is exemplified in one of Schieles last and
unfinished works, The Family. In it a family is portrayed, with
the male figure being a self-portrait. Although Schiele maintains
his expressive painterly quality and rich colors, the mood has
softened. Though the figures are nude, there is nothing lewd or
even really sexual about them. They are positioned in a realistic
plane, as opposed to floating about the frame of the work.
Schiele does exaggerate and distort the figures a bit, but not in
a frightening manner as before. The Family is a poignant por-
trait of the life that Schiele was beginning to embrace and
shows his maturity.
As with many artists, Egon Schieles work was characterized
by many transitions. Through the growth of his style he dis-
played the surprising and dark progressions of his own mind.
Though his portraiture was at times more provocative than
beautiful, Egon Schiele created a startling look into the psyche
of turn-of-the-century Viennese culture.
20
Halley Curlis
Self-Portrait
21
The Portraiture of Egon Schiele
Nude Female
Two Women
The Family
22