Egon Schiele: An Artist's Midnight Soul...

wow...they're beautiful multitudes. Thanks for posting :flower: I've never seen any of his 'nature' work before...
 
You are most welcome Fab..^_^ .. I'm glad that you liked them..
What I also find fascinating about these "nature' painting is that Schiele carries his focus on decay, sadness, melanchly, pain etc..., that we see in his nudes/selfportraits in to the 'nature' painting... most of the painting he did of nature and landscapes he captured in the mood of Autumn... where we see everything decaying slowly into winter.. this sounds really depressing, but I find something quite special in this movement...
 
Wonderful thread,Multitudes. I'd like to give you a karma! He's also one of my fave painter/artist.
 
funny how i never noticed this thread
i love schiele's work...quite the inspiration..compare to his admirer..klimt..i prefer his work more
it's so raw and so not perfect that it expresses one's sexual desires to a much more realistic way
 
Yes, I agree this thread should be revived...and if it wasn't for my friendship with Multitudes I probably wouldn't have paid more than a passing interest to Schiele. He has now become one of my favorite artists.


[SIZE=+1]EGON SCHIELE-MUSEUM[/SIZE]
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On June 12th 1990, on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the birth of Egon Schiele, the town of Tulln set up a worthy memorial to its greatest son in opening the Egon Schiele-Museum. The museum is situated directly on the banks of the Danube in Tulln, in the former district prison. It was Egon Schiele's stay and his creation of ten striking drawings in the prison cell at Neulengbach that engendered the idea of renovating the former district prison as the Schiele-Museum. Today you can see more than 100 original paintings of Egon Schiele in this museum.
[SIZE=-1]Donaulände 28 , Tulln on the Danube , 3430 , Austria Phone ++43-2272-64570 , Fax ++43-2272-64116
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egonschiele.museum.com
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Sitzende Frau (1910) is my favourite by Schiele

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scanned by MMA
 
Thank you Whitelinen for reviving this thread. :heart: ...

You're all welcome for the thread, it's my pleasure. He is so unique to me and such an inspiration, so i'm especially glad when I hear that I have been able to open somebody eyes to Schiele ... and thank you Goya for the Karma :heart: ...

I'm just gonna post some more of Schieles not so knowned 'nature' and city paintings, because it seems like the ones i posted long time ago are not showing ...

Untergehende Sonne(1913)
596px-Egon_Schiele_093.jpg

Vier Bäume(1917)
770px-Egon_Schiele_094.jpg

wikimedia.org
 
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Stilisierte Blumen vor dekorativem Hintergrund, Stilleben91908
602px-Egon_Schiele_090.jpg

Kleiner Baum im Spätherbst(1911)
477px-Egon_Schiele_034.jpg

Welke Sonnenblume(1912
4DPict

wikimedia.org
 
I fell in love with his work, I think it was last year, there was an exhibition of his work in Van Gogh museum in Amsterdam. It was magical! The pieces were amazing, but they also had performance art, inspired by his work, very special.
His work is somehow confronting, haunting, but also very beautiful. Simply amazing. :heart:
 
There is something quite childish over Schieles city studies that I love ...

What is interesting to see is in contrast to the modern art at that time, as ex. Ludwig Meidner, the Futurists and the later French impressionists, to whom the "metropol", traffic and movement played a central role as a theme, Schiele always returned to depicting the provinces and small villages. This has proberly to do with, I think, during the whole industrialization and at that time there was a movement of people going into the cities, the life in the villages was abandonded for the "metropol", and I think in this abandonment Schiele found his love for decay and death ...

Tote Stadt oder Stadt am blauen Fluß(1911)
479px-Egon_Schiele_092.jpg

Kleinstadt(1912-13)
609px-Egon_Schiele_035.jpg

Stein an der Donau II(1913)
609px-Egon_Schiele_088.jpg

wikipedia.org
 
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Thanks for the new pictures Multitudes :flower:

Does anyone know a good site with a lot of his works?
 
WhiteLinen said:
Thanks for the new pictures Multitudes :flower:

Does anyone know a good site with a lot of his works?

You're most welcome for the pictures ^_^ ...

Here are some sites which has a quite good cover of Schieles work ...

http://www.art.co.uk/asp/display_artist-asp/_/crid--879/Egon_Schiele.htm

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Egon_Schiele

http://www.leninimports.com/egon_schiele_gallery.html

http://www.soho-art.com/Egon-Scheile.shtml

http://pintura.aut.org/SearchAutor?Autnum=11112

The last one is a spanish site, so I hope you know a few words! :innocent: ...

I hope this helps :flower: ...
 
[FONT=ms sans serif,arial,helvetica,geneva]From Vienna to Cesky Krumlov to Tulln: [/FONT]
[FONT=times,palatino,times roman,garamond]A quest for the genius of Egon Schiele, part 1[/FONT]
[FONT=times,palatino,times roman,garamond]Photographs and Commentary by
Herb Ranharter
[/FONT]
museum.jpg

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There are four key places that let you come close to Egon Schiele in Europe: the Belevedere Museum, the Leopold collection in the Vienna Museum Quarter, the Schiele Museum in Tulln (about a half hour west of Vienna) and the Schiele Museum in Cesky Krumlov in the Czech Republic (a four hour train ride from Vienna). The Leopold collection is the most extensive, has many of the well known originals and is the most accessible. The Tulln Museum is full of facsimiles but has several artifacts from Schiele's life including the museum itself which is the prison where Schiele was incarcerated for lewd behavior.


The focus of this first of three articles is the Museum in Cesky Krumlov where Schiele's mother had lived and where he spent much of his time. In Cesky Krumlow Schiele ultimately was also ousted for lewd behavior.
The trip to Cesky Krumlov is a trip all by itself. (Pardon the pun.) A seemingly endless train ride from Vienna takes you to every dung heap in the chicken coup, but it is fun for sure if you like to change trains and look out over the landscape as it is slowly pulled away from under you. All the people you meet are very nice, helpful and friendly.

From the Krumlov station a 15 minute walk down hill takes you to the gate of a medieval Disneyland of a city, which turns out to be the star of the adventure. The Schiele Museum is easily found by hanging a right at the main square. Yes you have heard these words before, but you really can't miss it, that is if you can pry yourself loose from the enchantment of the village itself. Imagine every structure about 400 to 500 years old and older, cobblestones everywhere, plus the smells of restaurants and cafes luring you o succumb and lose your purpose.

portrait.jpg
The Museum is a converted brewery with much charm of its own. Columns and vaulted ceilings are complimented by brick and wooden floors and heavily beamed ceilings.

Prepare to surrender your cameras and bags in Stalag-like entrance where multiple locked iron gates remind you that the Iron Curtain may have been recycled along with some old attitudes. The documentation is extensive and rather dull in appearance loosened up by very few small original works and several facsimiles displayed under such dull light that you might think they are originals. Sadly enough, that is the lot of it. The remainder in the museum is an equally fiercely guarded collection of ... well ... I tend to be a bit critical on art and shall refrain from criticism. Needless to say 35 minutes is enough time for the vaults.

The real museum is the city of Cesky Krumlov that so obviously provided inspiration for many of Schiele's drawings and paintings. It is difficult to know what else motivated him in his work, but much of what can be seen in the various places reveals a deeply disturbed personality that is echoed in the equally disturbed clients who bought the work. Undoubtedly the work has its own unique style worthy of inclusion as art history and is now valued as such; one wonders at what personal price?


[FONT=times,palatino,times roman,garamond]A quest for the genius of Egon Schiele, Part 2[/FONT]
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After having traveled all the way from Vienna to the Schiele Museum in Cesky Krumlow in the Czech Republic I looked about town to see what is in my immediate vicinity. The big billing goes to the Schiele collection in the new Leopold Museum in the equally new Museum Quarters near the Vienna Ringstrasze at the foot of Mariahilferstrasze. The setting about the museum is grand, the royal stables converted for arts and events. The Museum itself is a colossal box; the architecture more or less fails to please. There are indeed a great many Schiele drawings and paintings to be seen. The remainder of the collection is interesting primarily from an art historical perspective. The stars on display are a few stunning works by Gustav Klimt and the many Schiele paintings and drawings which are all of a dark and depressing nature.
They appear not at all like the reproductions commonly seen in books where color and contrast are inevitably enhanced. I think they reveal the deeply troubled nature of the artist. It is forbidden to take pictures and the ban is strictly enforced; there are nearly as many guards as there are rooms, and they follow you at all times as if you were a suspected art thief; hence, just the photograph of the poster on the outside wall.

leopold2.jpg
The best of Schiele's work is in the Belevedere Museum. The collection in this museum is splendid, well save the few abstract pieces in the lower tract of the Upper Museum - antidote?

Personally I am not much interested in the genre works of the 18th and 19th Century but there is some fine craftsmanship to be seen. The Lower Museum is well worth a visit with a collection of Messerschmidt heads and an absolutely amazing new collection of church art with exhibits dating all the way back to the 13th Century. It is stunning to see how the colors are preserved and how expressively the stories are depicted.

This leaves one more journey for me: to Tulln where Schiele was also thrown in jail for lewd behavior. The jail is now the gallery. I shall go and visit it soon and hopefully come back with more photographs.


[FONT=times,palatino,times roman,garamond]A quest for the genius of Egon Schiele, Part 3[/FONT]
[FONT=times,palatino,times roman,garamond]This is the third and final leg of the journey:
The Egon Schiele Museum in Tulln.

[/FONT]A 40-minute train ride outside of Vienna brings you to the birthplace of Egon Schiele, Tulln. Right at the bridge across the river Danube not far from downtown Tulln is an old jail that now serves as a museum. A new sculpture showing the artist twisting his hands much like he drew them in his pictures now draws you into the museum. The museum is an emulation of the jail in Neulengbach where Schiele was incarcerated for lewd behavior, and the cells now house more than 100 of his original drawings. Two floors of an odd assortment of facsimile and originals take you through the life story of the artist. A death mask of the artist and the painting of the broken mill are perhaps the most impressive of the exhibits. The drawings Schiele did while in jail have a fascinating line quality and are interesting to see as originals. A much too small bronze head of Egon Schiele that is placed on a pedestal in the stairwell looks a bit provincial if not outright silly.

A Wolfgang Hutter exhibit provided contemporary variety to the Museum during my visit. I was told it is necessary to provide a floor of contemporary art to attract visitors -- Schiele alone doesn't do it.

It is not a big Museum but it is definitely worth a visit. Combine it with whatever shows are in town. There seems to be a rock concert just about every weekend or some other event, and a stroll or a bike ride along the Danube disperses an afternoon with ease.

Greetings from Vienna,
Herb Ranharter
art2u.com/artist./ranharter.html
 
Coming December 2006

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Egon Schiele: The Egoist

Paperback: 160 pages
Publisher: "Harry N. Abrams, Inc." (December 1, 2006)
Language: English
ISBN: 0810992612

Book Description

Egon Schiele (1890–1918) was one of the most popular and influential painters to emerge from turn-of-the-century Vienna. Before his premature death at 28, he managed to be thrown in prison on a morals charge and also to create a strongly erotic body of work, both deeply expressive drawings and sublimely beautiful paintings. This enfant terrible of pre-WWI Vienna worked in the shadows of Klimt and Freud, but he found his own voice, and his own nude body was his best model.

Egon Schiele delves into both his controversial sexual themes and neglected aspects of Schiele’s art, notably his formal experiments and his later expressionistic portraits and allegorical paintings—works that reveal much about the importance of his short career.

About the Author
Jean-Louis Gaillemin is an art historian at the University of Paris IV-Sorbonne. A journalist and cofounder of Beaux Arts magazine, he has contributed to numerous international magazines, including World of Interiors, FMR, and Architectural Digest.

amazon.com

 
You're all most welcome, and thank you MissMagAddict for sharing. :heart: ...
I think that book looks very interesting. *Adding to the christmas wish list* :P ... :lol:
 
Schieles enormous impact and influenze on contemporary culture is undoubtable, as examine and traced in the publiaction, I bought a while ago, titled Egon Schiele: The Roanald S. Lauder And Serge Sabarsky Collections Edited by Renée.
From artists, musicians to fashion designers ...

here are some ex. of Schiele's impact in fashion. All comparison, text and photos are from the publication mentioned, but unfortunately I don't own a scanner, so I had to find the images on the internet and some I couldn't find. The images in question is Egon Shiles painting Fashion Design: Dark Suit, Hat with Wide Band(1910), which was suppose to go with Calvin Klein image and text. The other image I couldn't find was from Nina Ricci, Fall 2005 advertising campaign, creative director: Lars Nilson. Photograph by Glen Luchford which is suppose to go with the Lars Nilsson text and Schiele painting.

If anybody can find those easily or are in possession of those it would be great if you would post them! :flower: ...

All Schiele photos posted are from source: pintura.aut.org and wikipedia.org
 

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