."..offers a comprehensive showcase of the celebrated Norwegian artist's pioneering and unique contributions to modern art, published on occasion of the 150th anniversary of his birth and the major exhibition Munch 150, being held in 2013 at the Munch-museet and Nasjonalgalleriet in Oslo, Norway"--P. [4] of cover.
Published to accompany an exhibition at the Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery, University of Glasgow from 12 June to 5 September 2009 and the National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin from 18 September to 6 December 2009.
Takes a comprehensive look at Munch's relationship to Denmark. It shows how much his Danish contacts influenced his reception of contemporary French painting as well as his early oeuvre. Generously illustrated, the volume presents some relatively unknown works created in and around Copenhagen and during Munch's seven-month stay in a psychiatric clinic.
Scandinavia's most famous painter, the Norwegian Edvard Munch (1863-1944), is probably best known for his painting The Scream, a universally recognized icon of terror and despair. (A version was stolen from the Munch Museum in Oslo, Norway, in August 2004, and has not yet been recovered.) But Munch considered himself a writer as well as a painter. Munch began painting as a teenager and, in his young adulthood, studied and worked in Paris and Berlin, where he evolved a highly personal style in paintings and works on paper. And in diaries that he kept for decades, he also experimented with reminiscence, fiction, prose portraits, philosophical speculations, and surrealism. Known as an artist who captured both the ecstasies and the hellish depths of the human condition, Munch conveys these emotions in his diaries but also reveals other facets of his personality in remarks and stories that are alternately droll, compassionate, romantic, and cerebral. This English translation of Edvard Munch's private diaries, the most extensive edition to appear in any language, captures the eloquent lyricism of the original Norwegian text. The journal entries in this volume span the period from the 1880s, when Munch was in his twenties, until the 1930s, reflecting the changes in his life and his work. The book is illustrated with fifteen of Munch's drawings, many of them rarely seen before. While these diaries have been excerpted before, no translation has captured the real passion and poetry of Munch's voice. This is a translation that lets Munch speak for himself and evokes the primal passion of his diaries. J. Gill Holland's exceptional work adds a whole new level to our understanding of the artist and the depth of his scream.
Published on the occasion of the exhibition, "Edvard Munch: The Frieze of Life," National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 13 October 2004 - 12 January 2005.
Catalog of an exhibition held at the Centre Pompidou, Paris, Sept. 22, 2011-Jan. 23, 2012, at Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt, Feb. 9-May 28, 2012, and at Tate Modern, London, June 28-Oct. 14, 2012.
This volume explores Norwegian Symbolist painter, printmaker and forerunner of expressionist art, Edvard Munch's (1863-1944) unique artistic achievement. It surveys his career in its entire developmental range from 1880 to 1944. This work features a selection of color plates, essays written about Munch by authorities of his work, as well as in-depth documentation of Munch's art and career. This book accompanies an exhibition of Munch's art in America held at the Museum of Modern Art, New York in 2006.