The Harvard Art Museums welcomed a recently introduced exhibit, “Edvard Munch: Technically Speaking,” March 27 during their ...
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 ...
Munch was the archetypal tortured young man. This we know. The Scream kind of gave the game away. Yet, as this exhibition shows, he wasn’t a complete loner. Along with his demons he had friends, ...
Norway’s Edvard Munch’s painting “The Scream,” one of the world's most recognizable works of art, sold for 120 million dollars at Sotheby’s on Wednesday, setting a new record as the most ...
At his death, in 1944, Edvard Munch left hundreds of artworks to the city of Oslo—enough to fill a dedicated museum and then some. Because Munch had sold well during his long career, plenty more ...
Read Next: Forget The Scream. Edvard Munch at the Courtauld shows the artist’s lighter side Mortality is an insistent presence: an 1886 painting of his younger brother Andreas as a medical ...
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 ...
North’s visual identity for Munch references the museum’s sloping architecture, which was in turn inspired by a photo of the artist painting semi-naked Estudio Herreros designed the new building, ...
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