Sort By:
Seated Female Nude With Raised Right Arm, 1910by Egon Schiele
27" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Standing Woman In Green Shirt, 1914by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Lovers, 1913by Egon Schiele
27" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Kneeling Female Semi-Nude, 1917by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Composer Arnold Schoenberg, 1917by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Female Nude On Her Stomach, 1917by Egon Schiele
32" x 24" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Waves (Les Vagues), 1912by Egon Schiele
30" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Preacher (Self-Portrait), 1913by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Painter Gustav Klimt In His Blue Painter'S Smock, 1913by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Selfportrait With Shirt, 1910by Egon Schiele
24" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Seated Woman With Left Hand In Hair, 1914by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Portrait Of Painter Karl Zakovsek, 1910by Egon Schiele
33" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Artist's Sister-in-Law in Striped Dress, Seated, 1917by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Standing Girl In Blue Dress And Green Stockings, 1913by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Triple Self Portrait, 1913by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Seated Female Nude, 1914by Egon Schiele
28" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Kneeling Male Nude in Profile Facing Right, 1910by Egon Schiele
28" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Striding Torso In Green Shirt, 1913by Egon Schiele
25" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Seated Female Nude, Back View, 1915by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Nursing Mother (Stephanie Gruenwald), 1917by Egon Schiele
24" x 32" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Reclining Woman With Black Stockings, 1917by Egon Schiele
40" x 28" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Portrait of Dr. Heinrich Rieger, 1917by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Woman Standing with Hands Clasped, 1914by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Standing Semi-Nude With Raised Left Arm, 1914by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Crouching Nudeby Egon Schiele
38" x 28" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Reclining Female Nude with Green Cap, Leaning to the Right, 1914by Egon Schiele
39" x 28" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Reclining Female Nude On Red Drape, 1914by Egon Schiele
32" x 24" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Two Reclining Figures, 1912by Egon Schiele
25" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Two Girls (Lovers), 1914by Egon Schiele
39" x 28" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Zwei Frauen In Umarmung [Two Women Embracing], 1911by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Yellow Town, 1914by Egon Schiele
33" x 24" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Nude Child, 1917by Egon Schiele
26" x 36" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Reclining Female Nude with Green Cap, Leaning to the Right, 1914by Egon Schiele
32" x 24" Framed Art Frame
+ More Sizes
Sort By:
Egon Schiele’s father died from syphilis when he was fifteen years old. He therefore became a ward of Leopold Czihaczec, his maternal uncle, who became disgusted by his lack of interest in academic studies. However, his uncle recognized his talent and passion for art. Schiele applied at the School of Arts and Crafts in 1906. The school was in Vienna. Within his first year at the school, at the insistence of several faculty members, Schiele was sent to the more traditional Academy of visual art in Vienna in 1906. At the academy, he studied drawing and painting, but was frustrated by the conservatism of the school. It can be seen from records that Adolf Hitler was rejected by the Academy in 1907; so many staffs were of the opinion that Adolf Hitler and Schiele knew each other in Vienna. In 1907, the artist looked for Klimt Gustav who was known for mentoring younger artists. Gustav took a particular interest in the young Schiele because he was gifted. He bought his drawings, offering to exchange them for some of his own. He even arranged models for Schiele and introduced him to potential patrons. That’s not all; he went ahead and introduced Schiele to the Wiener Werkstätte. This was an arts and crafts workshop that had a connection with the Secession. Schiele had his first exhibition in 1908. After completing his third year, he left the Academy in 1909. Together with other dissatisfied students, they founded the “New Art Group” through which they produced many stunning pieces of art work mainly as framed Egon Schiele art.