"The explosion of modern art and scientific thought in Vienna at the turn of the 20th century holds an enduring fascination. And perhaps no painter better captures the sense of liberation and latent crisis of that era — the era of Freud and Mahler — than Egon Schiele.While his self-portraits may be the first works that come to mind, more than half of Schiele’s output on paper are depictions of women.
Earlier this year, the National Museum of Korea in Seoul presented “Vienna 1900, The Dreaming Artists — From Gustav Klimt to Egon Schiele.” The show, in collaboration with the Leopold Museum in Vienna, drew some 80,000 visitors during its first month. Back at home in Vienna, from March 28 to July 13, the Leopold will present “Changing Times. Egon Schiele’s Last Years: 1914-1918.”
And at this year’s edition of TEFAF Maastricht in the Netherlands, the Vienna gallery Wienerroither & Kohlbacher will include in its booth a drawing of Schiele’s muse and girlfriend, Wally Neuzil, and a watercolor of the artist’s youngest sister, Gertrude." (Rebecca Schmid, The New York Times)
TEFAF Maastricht 2025
STAND 60915 - 20 March 2025MECC Maastricht, 6229 GV Maastricht