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Sposalizio (Double Portrait)

Artist/Maker (Austrian, 1886–1980)
Date1912
MediumOil on canvas
DimensionsOverall: 41 × 24 1/4 in. (104.1 × 61.6 cm)
Frame: 48 × 31 1/4 × 1 3/4 in. (121.9 × 79.4 × 4.4 cm)
Credit LineElisabeth Lotte Franzos Bequest
Object number1958.51
Status
Not on view
Copyright© Estate of Oskar Kokoschka / Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York, NYMore Information
Oskar Kokoschka, a contemporary of fellow Austrian artists Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele, was known for the expressionist, psychological, and penetrating quality of his portraits, particularly in the years before World War I. After 1919, he continued to make portraits but turned ever more toward landscapes and works based on historical or classical themes, maintaining the deep colors and intensity of paint application of his earlier years.

This painting, titled with the Italian word for "wedding," shows a couple who have been identified as the writer and critic Emil Alphonse Rheinhardt (1889- 1945) and his second wife, Elsa Romanic. In 1958, Kokoschka could himself no longer remember their names, writing to AMAM curator Chloe Hamilton that "the real names of the young people I have forgotten and only remember having heard long afterwards that the man had been gassed and the girl died from starvation during the Russian occupation of a part of Austria. .!.!. You see a very sad fate befell my sitters as, unfortunately, most of my friends of that époque." Kokoschka further wrote that he had given it the title "Sposalizio" because he understood that the couple intended to be married one day. (Both Rheinhardt and Elsa Romanic were depicted in drawings made by Kokoschka in 1912, and Rheinhardt did die in a concentration camp.)

The painting formerly belonged to Mrs. Lotte Franzos (1881-1957), who held a salon in Vienna in the early twentieth century where artists, writers, and politicians would meet, and whom Kokoschka painted in 1909. He wrote of her after her death, "She had meant a great deal in my life. And she remained loyal to my work, very different from many other people of my youth. I will always be grateful to her beyond death and especially that she left Sposalizio to the Oberlin Museum." Her bequest to the AMAM included paintings by Anton Faistauer and Carl Moll, prints by Dürer and Rembrandt, and a Kokoschka drawing of a nude youth from about 1907.
Exhibition History
Oscar Kokoschka
  • Galerie Arnold, Dresden ( 1925 - 1925 )
Sonderbund
  • Cologne, Germany ( 1912-05 - 1912-05 )
Oskar Kokoschka
  • Osterreichisches Museum fur Kunst und Industrie, Vienna ( 1937-05 - 1937-06 )
Kokoschka
  • Galerie Buchholz, New York (October 27, 1941 - November 15, 1941 )
Oskar Kokoschka: A Retrospective Exhibition
  • City Art Museum of St. Louis, MO (February 21, 1948 - March 21, 1948 )
  • Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, MA (October 6, 1948 - November 14, 1948 )
  • Phillips Memorial Gallery, Washington, DC (December 5, 1948 - January 24, 1949 )
  • De Young Museum, San Francisco, CA (April 10, 1949 - May 15, 1949 )
  • Wilmington Society of the Fine Arts, Delaware Art Center (June 5, 1949 - July 3, 1949 )
  • Museum of Modern Art, New York (July 19, 1949 - October 4, 1949 )
Oskar Kokoschka
  • Haus der Kunst, Munich (March 13, 1958 - May 11, 1958 )
  • Galerie Welz Salzburg, Vienna (May 19, 1958 - July 20, 1958 )
  • Municipal Museum, The Hague, The Netherlands ( 1958-08 - 1958-09 )
Signposts of Twentieth Century Art
  • Museum of Contemporary Arts, Dallas, TX (October 28, 1959 - December 7, 1959 )
German Expressionism
  • Gallery of Fine Arts, Columbus, OH (February 10, 1961 - March 9, 1961 )
Kokoschka
  • The Tate Gallery, London (September 14, 1962 - November 11, 1962 )
Oskar Kokoschka
  • Kunsthaus, Zurich (June 1, 1966 - July 24, 1966 )
Oskar Kokoschka, Das Portrait
  • Badischer Kunstverein, Karlsruhe (August 21, 1966 - November 20, 1966 )
Oskar Kokoschka zum 85 Geburtstag
  • Österreichische Galerie Belvedere, Vienna, Austria (April 27, 1971 - June 16, 1971 )
Oskar Kokoschka – Bildnisse von 1907-1970
  • Haus der Kunst, Munich (July 2, 1971 - September 26, 1971 )
German and Austrian Expressionism, 1900-1920
  • Indiana University Art Museum, Bloomington, IN (October 23, 1977 - December 3, 1977 )
Austria's Expressionism, Otto Kallir Memorial Exhibition II
  • Galerie Saint Etienne, New York (April 21, 1981 - May 30, 1981 )
Paintings and Drawings from the Vienna Secession
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (November 19, 1985 - January 31, 1986 )
None of These Things Is Just Like the Other: Twelve Students Raid the Collection
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (May 13, 1994 - July 17, 1994 )
Utopia and Alienation: German Art and Expressionism, 1900-1935
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 17, 1999 - December 19, 1999 )
Collecting the Vanguard: Art from 1900 to 1970
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (August 17, 2001 - June 2, 2002 )
Figure to Non-Figurative: The Evolution of Modern Art in Europe and North America, 1830-1950
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (August 23, 2002 - June 9, 2003 )
"To Make Things Visible": Art in the Shadow of World War I
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 3, 2009 - June 7, 2009 )
Side by Side: Oberlin's Masterworks
  • The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (March 16, 2010 - August 29, 2010 )
  • The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC (September 11, 2010 - January 16, 2011 )
Modern and Contemporary Realisms
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (August 6, 2013 - June 22, 2014 )
Vienna Modern
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 24, 2019 - January 13, 2020 )
Beyond the Barricade
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (July 16, 2022 - December 23, 2022 )
Collections
  • Modern & Contemporary