Egon Schiele - Moa, 1911
"Bodies have their own light which they consume to live: they burn, they are not lit from the outside." - Egon Schiele.
Anyone who knows me knows just how much I love the city of Vienna and its history around the turn of the 20th century with the advent of the Vienna Secession. I admire the period architectural works of Otto Wagner, and of course the paintings and drawings of Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele which are seldom exhibited in London. Schiele's work has been featured on this platform on previous occasions here, here and here, in large-scale international exhibitions. This intimately scaled exhibition though is devoted to Schiele's drawings. Portraits on Paper at Omer Tiroche then, was a rare and beautiful find. The drawings all figure studies from a private collection, were completed during two significant periods of Schiele's life. A few I have seen previously at the above exhibitions, the rest were all new to me including a tender, early depiction of his mother, whom by all accounts he wasn't particularly fond of. These sketches illustrate just how central the acts of observation and drawing were to Schiele's artistic practice. The human body fascinated Schiele and he found new expression forging an individual, highly distinctive visual language in the exaggerated facial expressions, eccentric, angular poses and sometimes explicit postures of the sitters in the drawings. There are several watercolour studies as well as some beautifully observed figure studies drawn with a concise economy of line which describe the posture and mood of the sitter perfectly. With the pencil portrait of Wally with her intense gaze out of the picture plane, Schiele appears to attempt to delve into the psyche of the sitter. Sadly Schiele's talent was cut short due to the Spanish flu epidemic which swept Europe in 1918. This exhibition is a real treat for anybody interested in the art of drawing.
Moa, 1911
Nude Couple, 1911
Boy in Green Coat, 1910
Sitzende Frau Mit Schwarzen Strümpfen, 1911
Sitzendes Madchen Mit Erhobenem, 1911
Portrait of Wally, 1913
Female Nude, Back View, 1917
Squatting Woman, 1918
AKT (NUDE), 1918
Artist's Mother, c.1906
Portrait of a Boy, 1910
Portrait of Young Girls, 1911
Egon Schiele: Portraits on Paper
until 2nd May
Omer Tiroche Gallery
21 Conduit Street
London
W1S