This visually stunning volume offers perceptive examinations of
several renowned German and Austrian Expressionist artists who redefined
modern self-portraiture.
The self-portrait has been a vital aspect of artistic expression
throughout history. Neo-Classical painters such as El Greco and
Rembrandt formalized the practice, and the first half of the 20th
century saw a dramatic transformation in the self-portrait's style and
context, especially in the hands of the German and Austrian
Expressionists. Vibrant reproductions of works by Egon Schiele, Max
Beckmann, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Oskar Kokoschka, and others are
accompanied by essays that explore how these artists--many of whom were
classified as degenerate by the Nazi party--imbued their images with
eloquent expressions of resistance, isolation, entrapment, and
provocation. From Schiele's erotically charged and overtly physical
paintings to Beckmann's emotionally fraught depictions of psychic
trauma, this important examination of a powerful aspect of modern
European painting brilliantly illustrates how the Expressionist
self-portrait became a powerful weapon against artistic oppression.