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Edvard Munch’s “The Scream” — an 1893 expressionist painting so famous it has its own emoji — contains a disturbing hidden message that art historians have now determined was written ...
Munch was hospitalized after a nervous breakdown in 1908. "The inscription can be read as an ironic comment, but at the same time as an expression of the artist's vulnerability," said Guleng.
Scientists at the University of Antwerp in Belgium say they have solved the mystery of a white smudge on the surface of Norwegian painter Edvard Munch’s most famous painting, The Scream (1890 ...
Edvard Munch, 1863–1944, was a zeitgeist conductor. Like Dostoyevsky before him, like Kafka after him, he was one of those somewhat hastily assembled humans—the skull plates not stapled down ...
Karl Ove Knausgaard's "So Much Longing in So Little Space” is a book of art criticism looking at Norweigan painter Edvard Munch, but it is as much about its author as it is about its subject.
Curators at Oslo’s Munch Museum noticed parts of the 1910 masterpiece had begun to fade to white, so a team of scientists from around the world joined an investigation to find out why.
Munch was deeply attuned to the natural world, something the overwhelming, overly broad presence of “The Scream” all but obscures in the public imagination. “Edvard Munch: Trembling Earth ...
Edvard Munch, “Self-Portrait in a Hat in Profile Facing Right” (1930), original gelatin silver contact print (image courtesy Munch Museum) New York is having a Munch moment.
There’s no separating the artist — any artist — from lived experience, though “Edvard Munch: Technically Speaking,” just opened at Harvard Art Museums, does its best.
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