Egon Schiele
With his signature graphic style, embrace of figural distortion, and bold defiance of conventional norms of beauty, Egon Schiele was one of the leading figures of Austrian Expressionism. His portraits and self-portraits, searing explorations of their sitters’ psyches and sexuality, are among the most remarkable of the 20th century. The artist, who was astoundingly prolific during his brief career, is famous not only for his psychologically and erotically charged works, but for his intriguing biography: his licentious lifestyle marked by scandal, notoriety, and a tragically early death of influenza at age twenty-eight, three days after the death of his pregnant wife, and at a time when he was on the verge of the commercial success that had eluded him for much of his career. (The Art Story)
Editorial (2)
Gustav Klimt’s “The Kiss"
You may not remember the first time you saw Gustav Klimt’s The Kiss (1907–1908), but, odds are, you’ve seen it before. It ma…
“Slow art” in the age of distraction
In this series, Head of Curation Poppy Simpson presents one work from the Meural art library she finds essential.