Monday, April 23, 2012

Edvard Munch's art, the Scream


Buy his famous arts and paintings




Edvard Munch, who never 

married, called his paintings his children and hated to be separated from them. Living alone on his estate outside Oslo for the last 27 years of his life, increasingly revered and increasingly isolated, he surrounded himself with work that dated to the start of his long career. Upon his death in 1944, at the age of 80, the authorities discovered—behind locked doors on the second floor of his house—a collection of 1,008 paintings, 4,443 drawings and 15,391 prints, as well as woodcuts, etchings, lithographs, lithographic stones, woodcut blocks, copperplates and photographs. Yet in a final irony of his difficult life, Munch is famous today as the creator of a single image, which has obscured his overall achievement as a pioneering and influential painter and printmaker.
smithsonianmag

My Great Web page



other posts for munch: 
>>>>munchs-scream-fun-versions 
>>>>edvard-munchs-art-scream 
>>>>edvard-munchs-art-artworks 
>>>>edvard-munchs-scream-animated

THE SCREAM










 

Munch's The Scream is an icon of modern art, a Mona Lisa for our time. As Leonardo da Vinci evoked a Renaissance ideal of serenity and self-control, Munch defined how we see our own age—wracked with anxiety and uncertainty.















His painting of a sexless, twisted, fetal-faced creature, with mouth and eyes open wide in a shriek of horror, re-created a vision that had seized him as he walked one evening in his youth with two friends at sunset.
As he later described it, the "air turned to blood" and the "faces of my comrades became a garish yellow-white." Vibrating in his ears he heard "a huge endless scream course through nature." He made two oil paintings, two pastels and numerous prints of the image; the two paintings belong to Oslo's National Gallery and to the Munch Museum, also in Oslo.














Both have been stolen in recent years, and the Munch Museum’s is still missing. The thefts have only added posthumous misfortune and notoriety to a life filled with both, and the added attention to the purloined image has further distorted the artist's reputation.





Custom Search

22 comments:

  1. Why is Munch Scream, shown under Van Gogh name in the search?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sorry....is google fault, not yours.

    ReplyDelete
  3. This is an amazing post . Great thanks for shared here .

    ReplyDelete
  4. Artists are beginning to realize that the only way to survive as an artist is to make it personal. For more ideal details about andy warhol prints, pop over to these guys.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Lovely post has been submitted here.Thanks for sharing.

    Clipping Path Service

    ReplyDelete
  6. Pretty section of content. I just stumbled upon your blog and in accession capital to assert that I acquire in fact enjoyed account your blog posts. Any way I'll be subscribing to your feeds and even I achievement you access consistently quickly.

    ReplyDelete

Translate