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ONLINECOLLECTION

Original Photography of the Bronze Sculpture “Kneeling Woman“ by Wilhelm Lehmbruck, 1920 - 1950

Leopold Museum,
Vienna
Gelatin silver print
16.7×11.8 cm

Artists

  • Julius Scherb

    (Linz 1881–1965 Linz)

Unfortunately not on display at the moment
The figure of the Kneeling Woman by the German sculptor Wilhelm Lehmbruck (1881–1919) is larger than life and exceptionally slim. It was created in Paris in 1911 and marked a radical break with the proportions of classic antiquity in the artist’s oeuvre. The elongated shapes, the upright body posture, the fact that one arm is bent and one extended, which suggests movement, and the instability of the kneeling position represented a surge of innovation in Lehmbruck’s sculptures that would come to foreshadow and influence later developments. Simultaneously, the lowered gaze and the humbly inclined head introduce a stylistic idiom aimed at revealing mental and psychological processes in a human subject through gestures and mimics. The Kneeling Woman was presented in New York, Chicago and Boston as part of the Armory Show in 1913, winning the German sculptor international renown. The work is therefore considered not only Lehmbruck’s most significant sculpture, but a prime example and prototype of Expressionist sculpture.

Object data

Artist/author
  • Julius Scherb
Title
Original Photography of the Bronze Sculpture “Kneeling Woman“ by Wilhelm Lehmbruck
Date
1920 - 1950
Category
Photograph
Material​/technique
Gelatin silver print
Dimensions
16.7×11.8 cm
Credit line
Leopold Museum, Vienna, Inv. 8129
Inventory access
Accession 2023 2024
Keywords

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Provenance

Provenance research
Leopold Museum i

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2023/2024 Partial funding for digitization by the Federal Ministry for Arts, Culture, the Civil Service and Sport „Kulturerbe digital“ as part of NextGenerationEU.