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Egon Schiele
Austrian, 1890–1918
In 1911, Schiele moved briefly to Krumau, his mother's birthplace in Bohemia, where he created many visionary cityscapes, but was forced to leave during the summer because of local disapproval of his unorthodox lifestyle. He moved to Neulengbach, near Vienna, but in April 1912 was arrested for creating "pornographic" pictures of nude schoolgirls, and was imprisoned for twenty-four days.
In 1913 Schiele collaborated on the magazine Die Aktion, which in 1916 devoted an entire issue to his work. Numerous exhibitions followed in Munich, Vienna, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, and Berlin. In 1915 Schiele married Edith Harms. Although drafted into the Austrian army and sent to Prague, he was declared unfit for military service in 1916 and assigned first to a camp in Muehling, then, in 1917, to an Army Museum in Vienna. In 1918 Schiele had his first comprehensive one-man show at the forty-ninth exhibition of the Vienna Secession and at the Kunsthaus in Zurich. On 28 October, Schiele's pregnant wife died during an influenza epidemic, which also claimed the artist on 31 October 1918.
Italian, born in Greece, 1888–1978