Reclining Female Nude appeared in public for the first time in 1916 under the title After Bath. Tomaž Brejc dates it to 1913 but it is also possible that the work was created between the end of Sternen’s time in Munich in 1914 and this exhibition, since the collection of glass plate photographs belonging to Sternen includes a female nude lying on her front with her head buried in her folded arms. The image is very similar to the photograph of Ivana Kobilca as a model that is believed to have been taken by Ferdo Vesel in the second half of the 1880s. Sternen’s reliance on a photograph in this work is confirmed by the shadows on the model’s back and the break of her body at the waist.
Tomaž Brejc draws attention to the ways in which this work differs from Sternen’s other nudes in its spatial concept and elegance of execution. The composition is somewhat unconventional, not only in the context of Sternen’s oeuvre, but more broadly. Sternen has placed the nude diagonally with the head in the foreground and lowered the eye point so that the viewer is looking down from above. In this way, he animates an otherwise static subject, which is also supported spatially by an intensification of the light – from the shadow on the left-hand side, it intensifies rapidly towards the middle of the picture and then fades again. The strong diagonal of the body is countered by a series of brief, muted caesuras in the opposite direction, implied in the segmentation of the body and the modelling of the folds of the sheet. Both elements are predominantly modelled with a palette knife. The background is neutral, with energetic strokes of a drained brush in Venetian red. Traditionally, works entitled After Bath show nudes engaged in drying their limbs or applying make-up. In this painting, however, Sternen has immobilised his nude in somnolence, changing his subject into a passive object exposed to the artist’s gaze. Like the subject, the manner of objectivisation of the model reminds us of the studio practices of Realism in the 1880s and the tradition of pure painting represented in Munich by the work of Wilhelm Leibl a decade earlier.