The Seated Woman With Bent Knees by Egon Schiele - 1917 - 46 x 30.5 cm National Gallery in Prague The Seated Woman With Bent Knees by Egon Schiele - 1917 - 46 x 30.5 cm National Gallery in Prague

The Seated Woman With Bent Knees

gouache on paper • 46 x 30.5 cm
  • Egon Schiele - 12 June 1890 - 31 October 1918 Egon Schiele 1917

Time for one my most favorite artists ever!

Egon Schiele was interested in the distinctive language of the human body, expressed both through fine and extreme mental and sexual transformations. In 1915, Schiele married Edith Harms. Edith and her sister Adele sat as models for the artist. The empty space around the seated model enhances the figure’s sitting position. Although this is a woman closely related to the artist, his beloved Edith, she is portrayed assuming a provocative, relaxed pose, wearing black stockings and a hitched-up petticoat. The overall visual impact of the image is completed by an expressive tonality and the visible strokes done with gouache. Schiele studied and staged the poses of his models to the extent that ultimately he achieved a deformed and even grotesque effect. The artist disrupted the deep-rooted contrast between beauty and ugliness, introducing the provocative concept of the novel combination of form and emotion, which, in later years, he shifted more towards a sense of mystery.

We present today's painting thanks to the National Gallery Prague.  : )

P.S. This beautiful artwork by Schiele was recreated in photographic series with actress Julianne Moore. Can you see the resemblance? Check out the pictures here!