Art News

The Leopold Museum Presents Egon Schiele "Melancholy and Provovation"

artwork: Egon Schiele - "Cardinal and Nun (Caress)", 1912 - Oil on canvas - 70 x 80.5 cm. - Colleciton of the Leopold Museum, Vienna. On view in "Melancholy and Provovation" until January 30th 2012.


Vienna.- On the occasion of the tenth anniversary of its opening, the Leopold Museum dedicates its autumn exhibition 2011 to the works of Egon Schiele. “Melancholy and Provovation” is on view at the museum through January 30th 2012. The title of the exhibition is a reference to the artist’s state of mind, especially during his early oeuvre between 1910 and 1915. Schiele’s early works of 1910 hit his audiences like “an ice-axe breaking the frozen sea within us” (Franz Kafka), upsetting the idyllic world of the conservative bourgeoisie. His renderings depict thin, emaciated men, their bodies in unnaturally bright colors and absurd contortions, with poses and movements serving both the composition and as a provocative expression of inner emotions. While these depictions are shocking in their originality, they do bear a resemblance to the slender youths created by the sculptor George Minne and “The Dreaming Boys” of Oskar Kokoschka who himself was inspired by Minoan art.

artwork: Egon Schiele - "Self-Portrait with Peacock Waistcoat", 1911 Gouache, tempera, watercolor and blue chalk on paper, mounted on cardboard 51.5 x 34.5 cm. - Ernst Ploil, Att the Leopold Museum.Egon Schiele also incorporated his impressions derived from Javanese shadow puppets into his works, and later the gestures of contemporary expressionist dance. Schiele broke away from this stylistic phase already at the end of 1910; one could say that he turned inwards. His depictions became increasingly soft, Schiele began to draw with his brush and ventured deeper into a new and unreal dreamworld, both in terms of his manner of painting and in terms of his motifs. The resulting works are wondrous and idiosyncratic visions. In the work “Landscape with Ravens” Schiele left behind the traditional pattern of fore-, middle- and background. He interpreted the pictorial space as an integral representation of emotions, rediscovering it as an intellectual in-between world. Oneiric images and visions served as the basis for the figures in “Lyricist” and “Self-Seer”. Schiele also invented fairytale-like and psychological scenes, including “Dead City” and the work “House and Wall in Hilly Landscape” (modeled on the deserted summer house which he used as a studio before he was expelled from the city by the people of Ceský Krumlov).

The rendering “Dead City” provides the key to understanding all of Schiele’s works. Schiele exhibited these works created in 1911 in his first solo exhibition held that year at the Galerie Miethke. They included the painting “Melancholia”, which he would later paint over, the five-fold self-portrait “Ravings”, which is now lost, as well as the demonic portrait of Eduard Kosmack. These works, as well as later ones such as “Dead Mother”, “Procession” and “Revelation”, show Schiele as a dreamer, as an imaginative genius – an impression that is also reflected in his poems. Schiele’s works of the following years continued to be created in this spirit of dreamy rapture. His erotic works should also be viewed from this perspective – as metaphors and allegorical fantasies. In the painting “Cardinal and Nun” the stirring theme of sexuality is captured within a stringent compositional framework. Schiele’s works from this period are cryptic renderings on which the artist remarked that one had to “look into” them.

The stooped posture of the figures in his main work “The Hermits” is meant to express the sorrow of the world. The artist wrote about the painting that “it was created out of an inner necessity”. All these paintings are moving artworks whose melody strikes a chord with the soul of the beholder, echoing their own feelings, experiences and dreams. In 1914 Schiele created anthropomorphic renderings of houses such as “Houses by the Sea” which conveys a devastating atmosphere, as if the world had come to an end. In his largest work “Levitation” of 1915, Schiele depicted hovering figures as a metaphor of dying, for death accompanied the artist all his life.

artwork: Egon Schiele - "Levitation (The Blind II)", 1915 - Collection of the Leopold Museum. On view in "Melancholy and Provovation" until January 30th 2012.

artwork: Oskar Kokoschka - "Poster for the play 'Murderer, the Hope of Women' at the Internationale Kunstschau 1909" - Collection of the Leopold Museum, Vienna. © VBK Vienna, 2011. Schiele‘s works are presented in juxtaposition with the metaphorical, archaic world of Oskar Kokoschka, with the poster for his play “Murderer, the Hope of Women” and with allegorical renderings such as the gruesome-looking “Skinned Mutton” and the skulllike portrait “Father Hirsch”. Oskar Kokoschka’s “Self-portrait at the Easel with Doll” concludes the presentation.

The Leopold Museum is a unique and active museum awash with light in the heart of Vienna and the biggest cultural magnet in the MuseumsQuartier. Besides exciting special exhibitions, it not only houses the most substantial and most important collection of Egon Schiele worldwide but also priceless masterpieces by Gustav Klimt, including what is probably most important figurative painting “Death and Life”. In no other museum in Vienna one can get so close to the fabled “Fin de siècle Vienna” and witness the birth of Modernity. The collection shows how the art of the Habsburg Empire changed from strict Historicism and romantic impressionism within a few years to the unique “Wiener Moderne” which encompasses Klimt and Schiele as well as Oskar Kokoschka, Richard Gerstl, Koloman Moser and many other artists who are all well represented with major works at the Leopold Museum.

A further focus of the museum is on the Austrian interwar period, which brought out many important artists like Albin Egger-Lienz, Anton Kolig and Herbert Boeckl and partly points in the direction of the second half of the twentieth century. This is why Austrian artists of the post war generation or exceptional works of the nineteenth century by Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, Friedrich Gauermann, August von Pettenkofen, Anton Romako, Emil Jakob Schindler, Carl Schuch and others are repeatedly presented. Substantial and amazingly modernly designed into the everyday objects of the Fin de Siècle round up the collection, especially works by Otto Wagner, Adolf Loos, Dagobert Peche and the founders of the Wiener Werkstätte Josef Hoffmann and Koloman Moser all of whom can be seen in the museum. And since all the great artists of the Wiener Moderne met on a regular basis in the epochal coffee houses for inspiring exchanges, it goes without saying that the Leopold Museum also has a coffee house. Visit the museum’s website at … http://www.leopoldmuseum.org