58.5 x 85 cm. (23 x 33.5 in.) Kristiania, Blomqvist Kunsthandel, Edvard Munch, 1918, no. 10 Kristiania, Blomqvist Kunsthandel, Edvard Munch, 1921, no. 43 (titled ...
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 ...
When people think of Edvard Munch’s contribution to art history, they typically look to the expressionistic imagery the moody Norwegian artist used to capture the perturbed psychology around the turn ...
In the 1890s, Norwegian artist Edvard Munch ran afoul of his painting teacher, Leon Bonnat. “Use your eyes, young man,” Bonnat shouted when he saw that Munch had depicted a pinkish brick wall in lurid ...
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 ...
Beyond “The Scream,” there’s a side of the artist that’s long been unexplored in the U.S., as shown by “Trembling Earth” at the Clark Art Institute. By Roberta Smith Roberta Smith, the co-chief art ...
Nature radiates, vibrates, mutates. It chants, sways and dances. Two shows at the Clark Institute illuminate this joy and complexity through the phenomenological renditions of Edvard Munch (1863-1944) ...
"The Kiss in the Field," 1943 woodcut printed in red-brown with watercolor on wove paper National Gallery of Art, Washington, Gift of Ruth Cole Kainen Two years ago, the National Gallery of Art in ...
The skies darkened, the sun became a burning ball of light viewed through a veil of haze, the air choked by smoke from Canadian wildfires. Nature’s scream was heard throughout the western hemisphere ...
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Ideas about what the world is made of — its constituent elements — were running riot when Edvard Munch (1863-1944) came into his own as an artist. Geology — and specifically ...
A trove of works by the Norwegian Expressionist painter and printmaker Edvard Munch has been gifted to Harvard Art Museums by the late collectors Lynn Straus and her husband, Philip Straus, who ...
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 ...
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