Art Knowledge News
Pinacotheque de Paris to Showcase Edvard Munch or the "Anti-Scream" |
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| Written by Ann Cremin |
| Saturday, 28 November 2009 03:11 |
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Edvard Munch or the
« Anti-Scream » will regroup about one hundred works (approximately sixty
paintings and forty graphic works), chosen principally in private collections.
The idea is to show Munch’s work after the beginning of the century, when he had
created an incomparable expressive style and when he started to include photos
and silent films in his body of work. The exhibition will start with works from
1880 up to 1890 as being the foundations of Munch’s artistic career.
Edvard Munch is known almost exclusively through a single work: "The Scream". It is certainly emblematic but not really representative of his body of work. The overheated notoriety of this painting resulted in the overshadowing of the work as a whole, as well as of the artist’s true intent. Regarded in Norway as the most important painter of all time, it is nowadays essential to return to the deeper meaning of Munch’s legacy. It is vital to grasp how, more than any other painter of his generation, Munch worked in such a radical manner, with such an experimental vision from the very start and over such a long period. It is amazing to note so early in art history, a painter who broke away from all the conventions to which all the preceding artists and movement had accustomed us. It is astounding to note that as early as the 1880s, Munch attacked the layers of color, he literally ploughed the pictorial surface, or else left his wok outdoors under the rain and the snow , transferred photographs and silent films onto the canvases and the graphic works. Another surprise is the manner in which he reduced boundaries between media and techniques of printed graphics, drawings, paintings, sculptures, collages, photos and films. He belongs to the tradition of William Turner and Gustave Courbet, he is the missing link between such artists as Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Jean Dubuffet and Jackson Pollock in the history of modernism. He was also and more than any other, the fore-runner and founder of fauvism and expressionism. His impact on the French artists of his time was radical. It was through those limitless excesses at that time, and above all by his attachment to painting’s and to the supports’ material qualities, that Munch provided a powerful exploration of the deepest human feelings and of life’s most fundamental experiments, even as the artistic world of the time was rather more absorbed by the relationship with nature and social representations of the world. He has left an overwhelming oeuvre, of incomparable strength. To undertake this important retrospective Marc Restellini invited Dieter Buchhart, the acknowledged authority on Munch’s work, to be its curator, surrounded by a prestigious committee of experts , which includes the famous art historian Richard Shiff as well as Øyvind Storm Bjerke, professor in Oslo University and Petra Pettersen from the Munch Museet. Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~ |
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Edvard Munch or the
« Anti-Scream » will regroup about one hundred works (approximately sixty
paintings and forty graphic works), chosen principally in private collections.
The idea is to show Munch’s work after the beginning of the century, when he had
created an incomparable expressive style and when he started to include photos
and silent films in his body of work. The exhibition will start with works from
1880 up to 1890 as being the foundations of Munch’s artistic career.

