The year 2013 marks the 150th anniversary of the birth of Edvard Munch, and his home country of Norway is humming with Munch Year events. In the capital of Oslo, the National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design and the Munch Museum are co-hosting the exhibition “Munch 150.” The exhibit looks back on Munch’s career through 220 paintings and 50 prints and other works selected from the more than 20,000 pieces that the artist referred to as “my children.”
Munch is known for his works on the themes of life and death that can be traced back to his experience of losing family members at a young age.
Munch’s mother died when he was five and his sister when he was 13. The deaths drove his father, who was a doctor, to mental illness. The girl portrayed in his early work The Sick Child is Munch’s beloved older sister who died from tuberculosis. Hopelessness and loneliness arising from the successive deaths in his family as well as constant anxieties and fears of illness and death due to his own sickliness were a major influence on Munch’s works.
Upon moving to Berlin in 1892, Munch started what would become his lifework The Frieze of Life. The works in this series depict love and betrayal, anxieties, jealousy and death. Among the paintings were his major pieces, The Scream (Fig. 1), Vampire and Madonna. Munch envisioned The Frieze of Life as a series of decorative pictures that together would portray life as a whole. Rather than independent pieces, he created the paintings to resonate among each other like parts of a symphony. Munch showed the 22 works that comprise The Frieze of Life at the 1902 Berlin Secession Exhibition. At the Munch 150 exhibit, the frieze will be recreated for the first time in 110 years.
The exhibit takes place at two sites. The works from 1882 to 1903 are on display at the National Museum. The works from 1904 to 1944 are on display at the Munch Museum. Munch 150 will be shown until October 13, 2013.
Munch is known for his works on the themes of life and death that can be traced back to his experience of losing family members at a young age.
Munch’s mother died when he was five and his sister when he was 13. The deaths drove his father, who was a doctor, to mental illness. The girl portrayed in his early work The Sick Child is Munch’s beloved older sister who died from tuberculosis. Hopelessness and loneliness arising from the successive deaths in his family as well as constant anxieties and fears of illness and death due to his own sickliness were a major influence on Munch’s works.
Upon moving to Berlin in 1892, Munch started what would become his lifework The Frieze of Life. The works in this series depict love and betrayal, anxieties, jealousy and death. Among the paintings were his major pieces, The Scream (Fig. 1), Vampire and Madonna. Munch envisioned The Frieze of Life as a series of decorative pictures that together would portray life as a whole. Rather than independent pieces, he created the paintings to resonate among each other like parts of a symphony. Munch showed the 22 works that comprise The Frieze of Life at the 1902 Berlin Secession Exhibition. At the Munch 150 exhibit, the frieze will be recreated for the first time in 110 years.
The exhibit takes place at two sites. The works from 1882 to 1903 are on display at the National Museum. The works from 1904 to 1944 are on display at the Munch Museum. Munch 150 will be shown until October 13, 2013.
National Gallery of Norway
Munchmuseet
Opening times:
Mon-Wed, Fri-Sun 10:00-17:00Thur 10:00-19:00
