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About this work

Heather Hess, German Expressionist Digital Archive Project, German Expressionism: Works from the Collection. 2011.

Egon Schiele here explored his typical genres, nudes and psychologically penetrating portraits, in the medium of printmaking. Schiele carefully manipulated the sinuous lines of Kauernde (Squatting woman) after observing nudes in the studio. The compositions of this print and Kümmernis (Sorrow) are closely related to two of his paintings of mothers, potent symbols for artistic creation in his work, while the portraits of Arthur Roessler and Franz Hauer honor two of his most important patrons. The portfolio includes two lithographs that Schiele made for a commission in 1918 and that were ultimately rejected, one of which, Mädchen (Girl), due to its graphic depiction of adolescent sexuality, another characteristic of his work.

PUBLISHING HISTORY

Schiele made only seventeen prints during his abbreviated career. Roessler had encouraged him try the medium, touting its financial rewards and the access it gave to the lucrative German art market. Roessler provided the plates for the prints in this portfolio, and Schiele incised them in 1914, although none were published during his lifetime. Four years after Schiele's untimely death from influenza in 1918 at age twenty-eight, Otto Nirenstein acquired the artist's prints for publication by the Verlag Neuer Graphik, the fine arts imprint of the Rikola Verlag in Vienna. Das Graphische Werk von Egon Schiele (The graphic work of Egon Schiele) contains Schiele's last two lithographs and his entire oeuvre of six drypoints.

Egon Schiele (Austrian, 1890–1918)

Portrait of Paris von Gütersloh (Bildnis Paris von Gütersloh) from The Graphic Work of Egon Schiele (Das Graphische Werk von Egon Schiele)

Date:
(1918, published 1922)
Medium:
Lithograph from a portfolio of six drypoints and two lithographs
Dimensions:
composition (irreg.): 10 1/4 x 11 15/16" (26 x 30.3 cm); sheet: 21 1/4 x 15 11/16" (54 x 39.8 cm)
Paper:
Cream, smooth, wove (rag paper).
Publisher:
Rikola Verlag, Verlag Neuer Graphik, Vienna
Printer:
Albert Berger, Vienna
Edition:
posthumous edition by Avalun-Verlag of 125 (including 25 on copper-plate printing paper and 100 on rag paper, of which 80 were included in the 1922 Rikola portfolio [this ex.]; plus few trial proofs, in black or color, printed during the artist's lifetime
Credit Line:
Gift of The Lauder Foundation
Reference:
Kallir 16b.
MoMA Number:
140.1982.2
Themes:
Portraits
Techniques:
Lithography
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