In this brilliant analysis, the erotic work of the Expressionist artist is examined within the perspective of history’s shifting views concerning beauty, aesthetics, and decency.
Egon Schiele’s controversial nudes and self-portraits were fiercely reviled when they first appeared in the early decades of the twentieth century and, nearly one hundred years later, they still have the power to shock. Examining why Schiele’s work elicits this response, the author explores the social constrictions of Schiele’s generation and the role of the artist as a breaker of taboos. Incorporating superb reproductions of Schiele’s works, those of his contemporaries, and historical photographs, the author offers a penetrating study of an artist whose idea of beauty transcended the morality of his time.
Klaus Albrecht Schröder is Director of the Albertina Museum in Vienna, Austria.
Seeking to express his hidden desires as much as to shock the culture, Egon Schiele painted candid representations of the sensuous. The growing understanding of the role of fantasy in the human psyche inspired him to explore human sexuality in painting in a way never before seen. The paintings in this well-crafted collection were those that led to Schiele's 1912 imprisonment for pornography.