Egon Schiele:
Seated Girl with Yellow Cloth (1913) (Sitzendes Mädchen mit gelbem Tuch)
Gouache, watercolor, and pencil on paper
31.3 × 47.7 cm
Restituted to the heirs of Viennese cabaret artist Fritz Grünbaum
(Kallir d1278)
This drawing, along with numerous other works by Egon Schiele, was looted during the Nazi regime. After World War II, parts of Fritz Grünbaum’s art collection resurfaced on the international art market, often without clear provenance. The restitution of this work to Grünbaum’s heirs is part of a broader effort to address the legacy of Nazi-era art theft and the displacement of Jewish collectors.
The drawing once belonged to Fritz Grünbaum (1880–1941), a celebrated Viennese cabaret artist, librettist, and satirist. Known for his sharp wit and political engagement, Grünbaum was a prominent figure in the cultural life of interwar Vienna. His performances often included biting critiques of authoritarianism, antisemitism, and rising fascism—commentary that became increasingly dangerous as the political climate darkened.
Following the Nazi seizure of power in Germany, Grünbaum continued to perform in Austria, even after Jewish artists had been banned from German stages. After the Anschluss in 1938, he attempted to flee across the then-Czechoslovakian border but was arrested by the Gestapo. He was subsequently imprisoned and deported to Dachau concentration camp, where he died in 1941.
Seated Girl with Yellow Cloth reveals Schiele’s signature tension between exposure and introspection. The nude figure is crouched low to the ground, legs splayed and head bowed, with her face obscured by a curtain of hair. One hand rests on her knee while the other clutches a yellow cloth—neither worn nor discarded, but suspended in gesture. The composition is stark and intimate, emphasizing the body’s angularity and emotional withdrawal. The yellow cloth introduces a symbolic ambiguity: a trace of modesty, a theatrical prop, or a fragile remnant of identity. The drawing’s expressive contouring and muted palette heighten its psychological charge, characteristic of Schiele’s 1913 period, when his work often explored themes of isolation, eroticism, and vulnerability.
Grünbaum’s art collection, which included over 80 works by Schiele, was forcibly dispersed during his imprisonment. For decades, the fate of these works remained obscured by gaps in documentation and the complexities of postwar restitution. The return of Seated Girl with Yellow Cloth to his heirs marks a significant step in acknowledging both the cultural loss and the personal tragedy endured by Grünbaum and countless others.

Leave a Reply to Harold van de LaarCancel reply