Woman and Girl Embracing
Egon Schiele, 1918
About this artwork
In 1918, the final year of Egon Schiele's tragically short life, he created *Woman and Girl Embracing a poignant charcoal drawing on paper now housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Modern and Contemporary Art department This intimate work captures two nude female figures locked in a tender yet tense embrace, their elongated limbs and angular forms embodying Schiele's signature Expressionist style. As a leading figure in early 20th-century Vienna, Gustav Klimt and the Secession movement, Schiele pushed boundaries with raw, psychologically charged depictions of the human body, often exploring themes of vulnerability, eroticism, and human connection amid the turmoil of World War I. Rendered in bold, gestural charcoal strokes, the medium allows for the dramatic contrasts and fluid distortions that define Schiele's draftsmanship. Measuring 18 1/4 × 11 3/4 inches, its modest scale invites close viewing, revealing the artist's masterful use of line to convey emotion over anatomical precision. Produced just months before Schiele's death from the Spanish flu pandemic, this drawing reflects his late preoccupation with fleeting intimacy, a hallmark of his oeuvre that scandalized contemporaries but now signifies modernist innovation in figure drawing. Bequeathed to the Met by Scofield Thayer in 1982, *Woman and Girl Embracing* stands as a testament to Schiele's enduring influence on Expressionism and contemporary art, inviting visitors to ponder the fragile beauty of human bonds.