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Self Portrait

Artist/Maker (German, 1867–1945)
Date1924
MediumWoodcut
DimensionsImage: 8 3/16 × 11 7/8 in. (20.8 × 30.2 cm)
Sheet: 12 1/16 × 16 1/8 in. (30.6 × 41 cm)
Credit LineGift of James A. Roemer (OC 1927) in memory of Helen Roemer
Edition25
Object number1995.17.2
Status
On view
CopyrightPublic domainMore Information
Although trained as a painter, Kollwitz went on to become a pioneering printmaker, working in etching, lithography, and woodcuts. Throughout her long career, she used her art practice to advocate for women and workers. Mothers, widows, and children were frequent subjects of hers, as was self-portraiture. We know from her diaries that she experienced deep depression following the death of her son Peter in 1914 in World War I. She candidly expressed this agony in her many self-portraits.
Provenance(Galerie Saint Etienne, New York); purchased by Mrs. James A. Roemer, Warren, OH; by gift 1995 to Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OHExhibition History
Utopia and Alienation: German Art and Expressionism, 1900-1935
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 17, 1999 - December 19, 1999 )
"To Make Things Visible": Art in the Shadow of World War I
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 3, 2009 - June 7, 2009 )
Artists on Artists
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 7, 2012 - July 29, 2012 )
A Century of Women in Prints, 1917-2017
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (August 8, 2017 - December 8, 2017 )
Collections
  • Modern & Contemporary
  • On View