Chicago, IL
During her short life, Paula Modersohn-Becker (1876–1907) radically charted her own path, exploring the intimate and singular aspects of the feminine experience in a bold style that foreshadowed Expressionism.
Her most striking works—among the more than 700 paintings, roughly 1,400 drawings, and eleven prints made across only 10 years—are frank portrayals of childhood and images of the lived bodily experience of motherhood, pregnancy, and old age. Modersohn-Becker is especially acclaimed for her many self-portraits, including the first nude self-portraits known to have been made by a woman. Beyond subject matter, her innovative style, which emphasized expression over representation, placed her at the forefront of experimental art in Europe at the turn of the century.
Despite her importance to art history and her posthumous place as a feminist icon, Modersohn-Becker has never been the subject of a museum retrospective in the United States. This exhibition marks her first full-scale museum presentation in this country. Showing the full range of her achievement over her career, tragically cut short by a postpartum embolism, the display includes more than 50 paintings, 15 large-scale drawings, and five etchings. Modersohn-Becker’s style evolved rapidly as she approached subjects such as figure drawing, landscape, still-life, and highly original figure paintings and nudes, many of which reflect an unconventional view of women.
Together these works, and the exhibition’s title, which comes from one of Modersohn-Becker’s letters, show an artist deeply invested in both artistic and personal expression and self-determination. “I Am Me,” she wrote. “And hope to become that more and more.”
Credit: Exhibition overview from museum website
Chicago, IL