Egon Schiele:
Seated Nude Girl Clasping Her Left Knee (1918)
Charcoal on paper
46.4 × 29.8 cm (18 1/4 × 11 3/4 in.)
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
(Kallir d2205)
Created in the final year of Egon Schiele’s life, Seated Nude Girl Clasping Her Left Knee stands out for its emotional subtlety and refined restraint. The figure—a young girl seated with her body turned inward, one knee drawn close—appears self-contained, almost withdrawn. Her posture suggests introspection, and the drawing’s sparse lines allow her presence to emerge without intrusion.
This work belongs to a group of late drawings in which Schiele’s approach to young models had clearly evolved. After the Neulengbach affair in 1912, which led to his brief imprisonment over accusations related to underage sitters, Schiele became far more cautious. By 1918, it’s evident that he worked with care and transparency: in this series, the girl’s mother was present during the sessions, and Schiele even drew them together. These choices reflect a shift—not just in ethics, but in tone.
There’s no sense of provocation here. The girl’s gaze is turned away, her body language closed. Schiele’s lines are minimal but expressive, capturing a mood that feels private and emotionally grounded. The absence of background and the simplicity of charcoal lend the drawing a sense of focus—what matters is the gesture, the presence, the moment.
By this time, Schiele had lost his mentor Gustav Klimt and was beginning to be recognized as a leading figure in Austrian modernism. Tragically, he would die later that year from the Spanish flu, just three days after his wife Edith. This drawing, then, belongs to a final chapter—marked by maturity, sensitivity, and a quieter kind of strength.
The drawing is part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s collection in New York. With just charcoal and paper, Schiele captures the complexity of youth—its vulnerability, its solitude, and its quiet resilience.
This drawing is part of a small but significant group of works from 1918 that include the same sitter and her mother. In due time, those related drawings will appear here as well, offering a fuller picture of Schiele’s late-period sensitivity and the evolving ethics of his practice.

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