Seated Male Nude (Self-Portrait) by Egon Schiele - 1910 - 150 x 152.5 cm Leopold Museum Seated Male Nude (Self-Portrait) by Egon Schiele - 1910 - 150 x 152.5 cm Leopold Museum

Seated Male Nude (Self-Portrait)

Oil and opaque color on canvas • 150 x 152.5 cm
  • Egon Schiele - 12 June 1890 - 31 October 1918 Egon Schiele 1910

If you're a regular DailyArt reader you know how much we love Vienna and Viennese museums. We present today's amazing masterpiece by Egon Schiele thanks to Leopold Museum, which owns the biggest collection of this artist in the world. Why Schiele today? On this day in 1890 the artist was born. The king of provocation and a protégé of Gustav Klimt, Schiele was a major figurative painter of the early 20th century. The twisted body shapes and the expressive line that characterize Schiele's paintings and drawings mark the artist as an early exponent of Expressionism.

In the radical and obsessive ways in which he envisioned himself, Egon Schiele staged his body, as it were, and through facial expressions and corporal gesticulations, brought it to the limit of what is anatomically possible. An early highlight of this was the 1910 painting Seated Male Nude (Self-Portrait). The 20-year-old artist presented himself naked, in an almost painful physical position. The skin, and with it the body’s sensual surface, is displayed with every tendon, muscle, and bone emphasized, making the body appear almost skinned. He projected this fragmented body onto the canvas with no apparent narrative context. The yellow-green flesh, signal-red eyes, nipples, navel, and genitals are far removed from any naturalistic color scheme. Schiele's search for the ego, pursued in countless self-portrayals, form a reflection on the quintessence of human existence, in which Eros and Thanatos play the leading roles.

P.S. You give me fever! Read about Egon Schiele’s orange obsession here.