Cardinal and Nun (Caress) by Egon Schiele - 1912 - 80.5 x 70 cm Leopold Museum Cardinal and Nun (Caress) by Egon Schiele - 1912 - 80.5 x 70 cm Leopold Museum

Cardinal and Nun (Caress)

oil on canvas • 80.5 x 70 cm
  • Egon Schiele - 12 June 1890 - 31 October 1918 Egon Schiele 1912

Provocative pictorial content, like the violation of clerical moral codes in the scandalous embrace in Cardinal and Nun (Caress), is testament to Egon Schiele's impetuous urge for renewal in which he radically breaks with traditions even beyond formal issues of art. The couple's relationship to one another, enforced by its rigid structure of form, might one lead to believe that Schiele was paraphrasing Gustav Klimt’s famous painting, The Kiss. The shocked expression on the nun’s face bears a remarkable resemblance to Schiele’s Self-Portrait with Raised Bare Shoulder of 1912. On the other hand, the cardinal’s naked legs seem to directly quote from an earlier watercolor showing Schiele’s companion Wally Neuzil kneeling with her bare legs on the floor. Therefore, it seems that Schiele intended to apply his and Wally’s identities to the cardinal and the nun, albeit in reversed roles.

We present this painting thanks to our favorite Leopold Museum in Vienna, which owns a magnificent collection of Schiele's works.  : )

See seven haunting town paintings by Egon Schiele here!

P.S. We are continueing our 7th birthday weekend and we still have a promo for our PRO version today. Press Upgrade to PRO and get DailyArt PRO for $1.99 instead of $5.99.  : )