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Cleveland Museum of Art

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Käthe Kollwitz — Pregnant Woman Contemplating Suicide (recto) Three Studies of a Child (verso)
Käthe Kollwitz

Pregnant Woman Contemplating Suicide (recto) Three Studies of a Child (verso)

1921

Working in a frank but emotional naturalistic style far different from that of her contemporaries, Käthe Kollwitz depicted a pregnant woman who stands as a universal symbol of human grief. Just a few bold strokes of crayon relay the woman’s despair. After World War I, Kollwitz’s work focused on the sorrows of those left behind: the children, widows, and mothers who underwent loss, physical neglect, and economic hardship. Her focus on grief and despair in this and other works emerged especially after her youngest son, Peter, was killed in the first months of the war.

Medium
black chalk or charcoal? (rubbed in places)

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About this work

Käthe Kollwitz, Pregnant Woman Contemplating Suicide (recto) Three Studies of a Child (verso), 1921

Working in a frank but emotional naturalistic style far different from that of her contemporaries, Käthe Kollwitz depicted a pregnant woman who stands as a universal symbol of human grief. Just a few bold strokes of crayon relay the woman’s despair. After World War I, Kollwitz’s work focused on the sorrows of those left behind: the children, widows, and mothers who underwent loss, physical neglect, and economic hardship. Her focus on grief and despair in this and other works emerged especially after her youngest son, Peter, was killed in the first months of the war.

Medium
black chalk or charcoal? (rubbed in places)
Year
1921
Seen at
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH

Related themes

Modern, Drawing, Unique Work

More works by Käthe Kollwitz

Collected by

Cleveland Museum of Art, Art Institute of Chicago