Tuesday, December 12, 2006
Thursday, December 07, 2006
Screaming of Anxiety and Despair
In 2003, astronomers claimed to have identified the time that the painting depicted. The eruption of Krakatoa in 1883 caused unusually intense sunsets throughout Europe in the winter of 1883-4, which Munch captured in his picture.
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Labels: Munch
Sunday, November 12, 2006
A Mystery of a Woman
Puberty (1984)
In one of his most famous paintings “Puberty”a naked adolescent girl sits on the edge of the bed staring nervously and fixedly at the viewer. Her arms are crossed in front of her getinal area, as if to protect and block it from view, but in reality she is calling attention to the image’s central theme: emerging female sexuality. The bed and especially the large, insistently phallic shadow she casts on the wall to her left reinforce the painting’s primary message.
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The Woman in Three Stages (1894)
The differing aspects of the female psyche are clearly expressed in his painting Woman in Three Stages (c. 1894), which can be seen as an important point of origin for The Dance of Life. The similarities between the two paintings are obvious. In Woman in Three Stages Munch also displays three women of different ages. A virgin figure with her "innocent phantasies of adolescent" gazes out to the sea. In the middle stands a physical mature woman, naked with her legs spread, who looks directly at the viewer. Her "seductive and provocative gaze is of such irresistible attraction that it guarantees the eternity of the human race". On the right side is a darkly dressed woman, hardly visible, with a pale face that bears witness to death.
Madonna (1894-5)
"Madonna" is one of my favourite paintings by Munch. He himself wrote:
"The pause during which the entire world stopes in its path. Moonlight glides over your face filled with all the earth’s beauty and pain. Your lips, as crimson as a ripe fruit, are half open as if to express pain. A corpse's smile. Here life and death shake hands. The chain that links thousands of past generations to the thousands to come has been meshed."
This painting was also called "Loving Woman" by Munch. This indicates that the painting carries both, religious and erotic content. The red "halo" emphasizes the connection with the Madonna. But the figure is also characterized by her abandonment to the sublime moment of love. "Madonna" depicts a woman seductively posed, or perhaps engaged in the sexual act: her arms urpised, her hips shift to one side, and her eyes closed in expressive reverie. Her frontal position forces the participation of the viewer, maybe as a sexual partner. The beautiful woman in the picture is a saint and a whore at the same time- sharing her body with the love one.
Madonna (Litograph, 1895-1902)
Labels: Munch
The Battle called Love
The center couple displays the immense power of love over two beings. At this point, the couple seems unable to notice anything around them.
At the end, however, we see the old, disillusioned woman as a symbol for the fleetingness of feelings and for inevitable separation.
Eye in Eye (1984)
The Kiss (1894)
Jealousy (1895)
Separation (1896)
Labels: Munch
The Dance of Life
The Dance of Life (1900)
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The Dance of Life takes place on a bright summer night along the shore of Aasgaardstrand in Oslo Fjord. Lit by a full moon, couples engage in an energetic dance. The phallic reflection of the moonlight in the water gives the scene a mood of sexuality. In the center of the painting, a man in a dark suit and a woman in a red dress are sunk within each other. Both of them are in the prime of their lives. The woman's dress wraps around his legs, a couple of strains of her hair reach out towards him. His eyes are closed; the two seem totally self-absorbed and oblivious of others. On the left side a young girl in a white dress and a smile on her face enters the scene. Her hand reaches out towards a flower in front of her. On the opposite side, an old woman stands in a black dress. She watches the dance of the center couple with a bitter facial expression, her hands folded in withdrawn.
One can find a very personal interpretation for The Dance of Life. Munch's first romantic experience with a cousin-by-marriage, to which Munch gave the pseudonym "Mrs. Heiberg", provided him with his own experience of the process of love. After an impassioned and joyous love affair she severed their relationship in the late 1880s. For Munch this was an emotionally painful experience, which he would struggle with for decades to come. "How deep of a mark she must have dug into my heart so that no other image can ever totally erase hers", Munch wrote in 1890 . A later love affair with Tulla Larsen, Munch found oppressive. He continually retreated from her, unable to respond to the intensity of her affection . Knowing these biographical details, one might suspect that The Dance of Life is rooted in Munch's relationships with Mrs. Heiberg and Tulla Larsen. The man in the center of the painting is Munch himself, dancing with his old love, Mrs. Heiberg. Tulla Larsen is displayed on the left wanting Munch's love and on the right side, she stands rejected by him. Munch's description of the painting in his diary supports this interpretation:
I am dancing with my true love- a memory of her.
A smiling, blond-haired woman enters who wishes to take the flower of love - but it won't allow itself to be taken.
And on the other side one can see her dressed in black troubled by the couple dancing - rejected - as I was rejected from her [Mrs. Heiberg's] dance.
As Munch was rejected by his first love, Tulla Larsen in turn is now rejected by Munch. Both of them, painted in black and turned towards each other, find themselves as partners in suffering.
Labels: Munch
Tuesday, November 07, 2006
Frieze of Life
In spite of that "success" he stayed in Berlin and entered a circle of literati, artists and intellectuals. In Berlin's bohemia they discussed the philosophy of Nietzsche, occultism, psychology and the dark sides of sexuality.
— blossoming and dissolution of love—
—anguish of life—
—death—.
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Labels: Munch
Monday, November 06, 2006
First paintings and a Mile Stone (The Sick Child)
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The Sick Child (1886)
In that painting a sick girl, her mother's leaning head, their touching, trembling hands and profound silence are giving the impression of helplessness towards the illness and closing death. It seems to be artist's scream of despair and emotional compensation for the death of his sister. He perfectly captures child's inner suffering and establishes a paradox between her deep suffering and her patient awaiting of the final moment when her tormented soul will be taken into a quiet and calm place and finally given the peace she longs for in the painting, when looking towards the infinite horizon.
According to Munch himself, he repainted the picture 20 times before finally exhibiting it. Later in life he said that this experiment bore the seeds not only of central works of his own, but also of problems which were to occupy several styles of art in the 20th century.
The shocking effect the painting had when Munch exhibited it at the Autumn Exhibition in Kristiania in 1886 is unique in Norwegian art history. A storm of indignation and protest broke out. At the opening people crowded around in front of the painting and laughed, and in the press it was described as 'an abortion' and 'fish stew in lobster sauce'. Here it is important to underline why the people's reaction was so violent. They were not accustomed to see that kind of painting. At that time, art was still synonymous of beauty, harmony, good shape, and not of ugliness and pain.
In spite of the condemnation and grave criticism Edvard Munch didn't give up. Moreover, he would come back to that paiting many times within next years, repainting it in other techniques, but always with the same strucking emotions.
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The Sick Child (Litograph 1896)
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The Sick Child (1907)
Labels: Munch
Friday, November 03, 2006
Edvard Munch- Childhood and a grave Decision
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Labels: Munch
Wednesday, November 01, 2006
Edvard Munch- Scream
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More to come...
Labels: Munch