Collection
Oskar Kokoschka
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Pieta (Drama Komödie Sommer Theater Poster) - Oskar Kokoschka
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Rest on the Flight to Egypt - Oskar Kokoschka
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The Kiss of Judas - Oskar Kokoschka
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Resurrection - Oskar Kokoschka
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Crucifixion, from Der Bildermann - Oskar Kokoschka
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Annunciation, from Bildermann - Oskar Kokoschka
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The Last Supper - Oskar Kokoschka
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The Woman Leads the Man - Oskar Kokoschka
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Flight into Egypt - Oskar Kokoschka
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The Annunciation - Oskar Kokoschka
Print · Framed
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Loreley - Oskar Kokoschka
Print · Framed
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The Red Egg - Oskar Kokoschka
Print · Framed
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The Elbe Near Dresden - Oskar Kokoschka
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Lovers with Cat - Oskar Kokoschka
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Bride of the Wind - Oskar Kokoschka
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Portrait of Adolf Loos - Oskar Kokoschka
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Crucifixion (Golgotha) - Oskar Kokoschka
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Portrait of Lotte Franzos - Oskar Kokoschka
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Artist Biography
Oskar Kokoschka
Kokoschka proposed to Alma Mahler within twenty-four hours of meeting her in 1912. When she later had an abortion, he pocketed a bloodied cotton pad from the procedure, saying it was his only child and always would be. He painted The Bride of the Wind (1913-14) as a double portrait of the two of them, then sold it to buy his own horse before volunteering for the First World War.
He was born in 1886 in Pochlarn, Austria. He was shot through the head in Ukraine and bayoneted in the chest in Russia. He survived both.
After the war, he commissioned a Munich dollmaker named Hermine Moos to create a life-size replica of Alma, sending detailed instructions about the feel of her skin and the weight of her body. Moos covered the figure in feathers instead. Kokoschka eventually staged a public execution: he decapitated the doll and smashed a bottle of wine over its head on his lawn. The police arrived the next morning, thinking he had murdered a woman.
The Nazis declared him a degenerate artist. He fled Czechoslovakia for London after the Munich Agreement and became a British citizen in 1947. His Expressionist portraits are among the most psychologically penetrating of the twentieth century: raw, agitated surfaces that seem to expose the sitter's interior state. He lived to ninety-four.
He was born in 1886 in Pochlarn, Austria. He was shot through the head in Ukraine and bayoneted in the chest in Russia. He survived both.
After the war, he commissioned a Munich dollmaker named Hermine Moos to create a life-size replica of Alma, sending detailed instructions about the feel of her skin and the weight of her body. Moos covered the figure in feathers instead. Kokoschka eventually staged a public execution: he decapitated the doll and smashed a bottle of wine over its head on his lawn. The police arrived the next morning, thinking he had murdered a woman.
The Nazis declared him a degenerate artist. He fled Czechoslovakia for London after the Munich Agreement and became a British citizen in 1947. His Expressionist portraits are among the most psychologically penetrating of the twentieth century: raw, agitated surfaces that seem to expose the sitter's interior state. He lived to ninety-four.
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