VIDEO: Eric Fischl On Klimt, Schiele, Kirchner And The Art Of Drawing

The Galerie St. Etienne, New York

In conjunction with the Galerie St. Etienne’s current exhibition, ERNST LUDWIG KIRCHNER: Featuring Watercolors and Drawings from the Robert Lehman Collection (through July 1), Eric Fischl shares his thoughts on the art of drawing.

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, 'Resting Head', 1912. Pen and ink on thin cream wove paper. Image courtesy Galerie St. Etienne

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, ‘Resting Head’, 1912. Pen and ink on thin cream wove paper. Image courtesy Galerie St. Etienne

Video interview transcript

The nature of painting and drawing, and sculpture, as well as photography, is to stop the world. [To] create for the audience, the feeling of something fleeting that people can come and perceive over and over. The object, actually, was forever, but it gave you an experience of evanescence or ephemerality, or something like that.

Color is amassing form and it’s light-filled so you simultaneously get through a gesture, a relatively simple gesture, you can get an essential feeling of a body that’s very physical and real, and also get the luminosity of it, the lightness of it.

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, 'Three Figures At Cafe Table', Circa 1915. Graphite on thin cream wove paper. Image courtesy Galerie St. Etienne

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, ‘Three Figures At Cafe Table’, Circa 1915. Graphite on thin cream wove paper. Image courtesy Galerie St. Etienne

In black and white, and certainly in the charcoals, it’s a slower labor to achieve. There is an essentialness to the black and white, a spontaneous, an essential quality to that it seems like it’s a revelation of the first order.

Gustav Klimt, 'Pregnant Woman and Man' 1903-04. Blue crayon on heavy tan wove paper. Image courtesy Galerie St. Etienne

Gustav Klimt, ‘Pregnant Woman and Man’ 1903-04. Blue crayon on heavy tan wove paper. Image courtesy Galerie St. Etienne

One of the fun things to do when looking at drawings is to imagine where on the pencil they’re holding. It gives you a sense of their deliberateness, sensitivity, the heaviness or the lightness of the line. With Klimt, he seemed to almost be holding the feeling of it, not the actual thing. It was almost like he was holding it closer to the top, so it had a kind of a interesting ‘stroking’ quality to it.  He was also somebody who never took his eyes off the model. That [hand-eye] coordination, that confidence with which he cold not see what he was doing, and also accept the distortions which were not based on realist observation, but were based on a feeling.

[Egon] Schiele knew from the neck down to the tip of the finger exactly where he was going and was nervous the whole way.

Egon SchieIe. Self-Portrait in Street Clothes, Gesturing 1910. Watercolor and pencil on brown paper Image courtesy Galerie St. Etienne

Egon SchieIe. ‘Self-Portrait in Street Clothes, Gesturing’
1910. Watercolor and pencil on brown paper. Image courtesy Galerie St. Etienne

I work from photographs. The photograph slices life so thinly that everybody is off balance. Everybody is in a state of motion and within a narrative structure you need that kind of animation to trigger the whole scene. Photography receives the image, Kirchner goes out and gets it.

I think that one thing that people do looking to art is they are looking for authenticity: the authenticity of beauty, the authenticity of eroticism, and anguish. It’s where you go to feel that this is the essential place for meaningfulness.

Founded in 1939, Galerie St. Etienne specializes in Austrian and German Expressionism and in works by European and American self-taught artists from the 19th century to the present.

This video and transcript © galleryIntell. Images courtesy Galerie St. Etienne.