Egon Schiele: 'The Family', 1918 (Belvedere Gallery, Vienna).
Illustration 1: 'The Family'. |
Illustration 2: 'Self Portrait', 1914. |
Having the privilege, much later, of viewing 'The Family' in The Belvedere Gallery, Vienna, I was struck by its compositional authority. I see it as Egon Schiele's great attempt to resolve the problem of alienation, and of human separateness, that is pervasive in his earlier work.
The family members are joined, like Russian-dolls, in a sequence of interlocking forms; but, positioned within a cradle of darkness, each face points in a different direction. The self-examining gaze of a father (and self-portrait) is, perhaps, a comment on masculine and parental uncertainty.
The emotional centre, however, is shifted elsewhere: towards the representation of a mother's face, with her expression of profound sadness and ambivalence.
This marks an unexpected transition. By focusing attention away from 'the self', Schiele appears to replace anxiety and isolation with the unifying principle of shared intimacy.
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