An installation view of the Edvard Munch's "Trembling Earth” exhibit at the Clark Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts. A view of the Edvard Munch's "Trembling Earth” exhibit at the Clark ...
That may change with “Edvard Munch: Between the Clock and the Bed,” SFMOMA’s new exhibit that — thanks largely to the museum’s collaboration with Norway’s Munch Museum — looks at the artist’s entire ...
Unfortunately, almost everyone has resonated at some time or other with Edvard Munch’s The Scream (1893). So much so, it seems, that a recent investigation found that the legendary masterpiece had ...
No, “The Scream” isn’t here — that most famous image by Norwegian artist Edvard Munch. But the exhibit of 44 of Munch’s paintings at San Francisco’s Museum of Modern Art may have enough anguish, ...
What the Gallery Says: “This exhibition of photographs, films, and a small selection of prints by Edvard Munch emphasizes the artist’s experimentalism, examining his exploration of the camera as an ...
Imagine if you could understand someone not just by what your eyes see in the physical world, but how your mind interprets this person. Would couples communicate better if they could wear their true ...
In 1901, Edvard Munch’s “Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones),” a chillingly enigmatic 1892 painting of a man and woman — Husband and wife? Lovers? Complete strangers? — poised on a rocky beach with ...
Walking from the bright, open, sun-lit spaces of the main Harvard Art Museums galleries into the dark emerald walls and rich, oak-wood floors of the “Edvard Munch: Technically Speaking” exhibition, ...
Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones) (1906-08), one of the highlights of the recent donation to the Harvard Art Museums Harvard Art Museums / Busch-Reisinger Museum, The Philip and Lynn Straus ...
Edvard Munch, Norway's most famous painter, particularly for the iconic work "The Scream", reportedly struggled with depression and anxiety, and possible bipolar disorder. He suffered several major ...
The authorship of the tiny inscription, “Could only have been painted by a madman,” was disputed. Curators in Oslo say the artist definitely wrote it himself. (But why?) By Nina Siegal Edvard Munch’s ...
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