
After Egon Schiele
<p>For over forty years, Sherrie Levine has addressed issues of authorship and originality. Appropriating images from art history—often citations of works by male artists—Levine considers the relationships between authenticity and subjectivity and desire and power. For After Egon Schiele, the artist photographed reproductions of eighteen self-portraits by the early 20th-century Austrian painter Egon Schiele.<br>She did not alter the original images but recontextualized them through the act of appropriation. The finished<br>work is at once a copy and an original, authored anew by Levine. Commenting on the choice for these particular selfportraits by Schiele, she explained, “There is something in his eroticism that strikes a chord. Partly it’s the selfconscious representation of his own narcissism.”</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1982
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Sherrie Levine
Artist

Photography
Sherrie Levine challenges notions of authorship and originality by directly appropriating and recontextualizing iconic works of art and documentary photography. Levine rose to prominence as a member of the Pictures Generation, a group of artists based in New York in the late 1970s and 1980s, whose work examined the structures of signification underlying mass-circulated images—and, in many cases, borrowing these images in order to imbue them with a new, critically inflected meaning.
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More by Sherrie Levine
The Mother of Us All
2007 · Digital print on white wove paper
Nature Morte: 1-6
2003 · Printed paper on six pieces of handmade paper
Steer Skull, Horned
2002 · Cast bronze
Black Newborn
1994 · Cast and sandblasted glass
Small Krate Tables: 1-6
1993 · Unfinished ash and construction screws
Koko
1991 · Gouache and pencil on paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Sherrie Levine
- Year
- 1982
- Watts ID
- WW-1982-142228
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





