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Showing posts with label Biography of Edvard Munch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biography of Edvard Munch. Show all posts

Norwegian Great Artist Edvard Munch - Image of the Soul

Posted by Art Of Legend India [dot] Com On 1:18 AM 0 comments

Images of the Soul 

Jealousy (1895), one of the early paintings in the Frieze of Life, Jealousy combines the themes of passion and jealousy with the biblical allegory of temptation. The isolated foreground figure has the features of the artist's Polish friend Stanislaw Przybyszewski, while the seductress in the background is portrayed as Eve, the temptress, picking the fateful apple.
Munch's belief that art should be of people who breathe, who feel emotions, who suffer and love' resulted in unprecedented images of the innermost feelings and mental anguish of modern man.

When Munch died, there was a copy of Dostoevsky's book The Devils by his bedside. It seems a fitting choice for a man who created his own nightmare visions and who provided the earliest pictorial definitions of paranoia and angst. Munch himself did little to dispel this image, claiming that art was his life's blood, costing him pain and suffering.

Bathing Men (1907-8), This painting forms the central panel in a triptych of bathers representing Youth, Manhood and Old Age, and shows man's harmony with nature. The light colouring and new subject matter reflect the artist's search for peace with life.  Photo detail 2345a2Initially, his personal style was built up from his own subjective view of the world around him. After his early naturalist phase, Munch's first important paintings including The Sick Child were described as 'impressionistic' by the critics, at a time when the word was used as a term of abuse. But rather than studying the variations of light caused by the weather or the time of day, Munch chose to concentrate on the momentary visual distortions that can occur as the eye adjusts to different conditions in effect, tricks of the light. As a result, most early commentators singled out Munch's apparently cavalier use of colour for their criticisms.

Girls on the jetty (1899), Munch repeated this composition numerous times in various mediums. In it he evokes the quiet mood of a clear mid-summer night, using subtle shades which contrast with the brightly coloured figures on the jetty. From this position, it was a short step to progress from painting visual impressions to depicting the effect that these impressions had on the emotions. The Scream is the most famous example of this. Munch was inspired by a dramatic sunset which he had witnessed while walking beside a fjord. However, by suppressing his own features and by transforming the waters and the sky into threatening shock waves of vibrant colour, he managed to convey the feelings of terror that he had experienced on that occasion. Munch defended his approach by stressing that 'Nature is the means, not the end. If one can attain something by changing nature, one must do it.

This directness was reflected in Munch's method of working. When, for example, he was commissioned to paint a portrait of the industrialist, Herbert Esche, Munch did nothing for the first fortnight except stay with the family until he felt he knew his subject. Then he set to work very rapidly, testing his colours on his client's expensive wallpaper and relying on a simple charcoal sketch on the canvas as his sole guide for the composition.
Dr Jacobson (1909), Munch painted portraits throughout his life, and although the full-length pose of Dr Jacobson is typical of other male 6 portraits, the brilliant colouring is a unique product of Munch's 71 disturbed state of mind at 2 the time.  
During his Symbolist phase (c.1889-1900), Munch turned to the depiction of ideas rather than emotions, using the mystical and sexual images that were fashionable as the basis for his Frieze of Life. In fact, the very notion of a frieze, with its attempt to simulate the resonant quality of music, was a thoroughly Symbolist concept.

KEY IMAGES 

For the several components of his Frieze, Munch selected a few key images and reworked them constantly, varying the colour schemes, the poses of the figures or even just the titles. 'Art is crystallization' he asserted, convinced that his revisions would eventually lead to the most powerfully emotive version of any given theme.

In this regard, Munch's interest in the graphic arts proved crucial. Originally, he had taken up etching, in 1894, as a means of earning extra income. However, as the possibilities of the medium became apparent to him, he grew more inventive and, at one stage, even acquired the habit of carrying a copper plate around in his pocket to use like a sketch book.

William Bell Scott (1811-90) Iron and Coal, Scottish painter and poet, William Bell Scott best known for his series of eight paintings representing Northumberland history a commission he won on the recommendation of Ruskin. Iron and Coal is the last and finest painting in the series and glorifies contemporary industrial life on Tyneside. Munch's work in Paris, in 1896, with Auguste Clot the printer who had aided Toulouse Lautrec and Bonnard proved a revelation. He learnt the techniques of making lithographs and colour woodcuts and, to the latter in particular, he brought exciting innovations. By sawing the woodblock into smaller sections and colouring these individually, he was able to produce multicoloured woodcuts easily, without going through the tedious process of making separate printings for each colour.

Prints were invaluable to Munch because the plates or blocks could easily be reworked or printed in different colours, thereby greatly increasing the scope for experiment. There was also a degree of feedback, from the prints to his canvases: compositions were often refined in lithographs or woodcuts and then translated back into paint, producing a simplified and more powerful image. In his later years, Munch grew increasingly reluctant to part with his paintings and, where he was obliged to sell, frequently made replicas for himself.

In his heart, he still nurtured hopes of displaying his works together, confident that the full force of his very personal style could only be appreciated if viewed en masse.

Vincent van Gogh (1853-90) Peasant Woman Tying Sheaves, One of the most influential artists of the 19th century, Van Gogh painted many agricultural workers during the last two years of his life, often basing his paintings on compositions by Millet. His early work as a lay preacher led him to invest his peasant subjects with true dignity.
The availability of his art to a wide public was of prime importance to Munch and, in a sense, this single desire governed his interest in friezes, graphic work and large murals. He despised the notion of a bourgeois art, where the academies became factories for producing paintings which vanished into the houses of the wealthy forever.

After Munch's return to Norway in 1908 his paintings lost their emotional intensity, and he turned to his native landscape, nature and working people for the subjects of his work. These themes were central to his large-scale public projects such as the University murals and the frieze at the Freia chocolate factory. But even in his apparently realistic works, traces of his old obsessions are still discernible. The bowed head of the model in his Nude by the Wicker Chair carries faint echoes of the shy apprehension in Puberty, while the workmen in Workers Returning Home have the same remorseless formality as the faceless figures in Anxiety.

Munch was, in every sense, an isolated figure. He had no pupils and he declined invitations to join avant-garde groups like Die Brucke. Even to his bohemian friends in Christiania and Berlin, he had remained something of an outsider. However, his haunting images linking the themes of sickness, death and raw, sexual power neatly encapsulated the mystical spirit of the Symbolists, while the directness of his style, with its daringly inventive distortions, paved the way for Expressionism.

Writer – Marshall Cavendish 

Norwegian Great Artist Edvard Munch - A Year in the Life 1905

Posted by Art Of Legend India [dot] Com On 3:56 AM 0 comments

The Great Artist Edvard Munch Painting "Arrogant Kaiser"
In 1905, Munch's native Norway won independence from Sweden. In the same year Russia suffered catastrophic defeats at the hands of Japan and was plunged into a revolutionary ferment. Meanwhile German blustering over French interests in North Africa provoked the first Moroccan crisis.

Although Norway and Sweden had been united by the same monarch since 1814, the former still retained their own parliament (the Storting) to govern internal affairs. A growing national consciousness echoed by an explosive literary revival at the end of the 19th century led to the Storting's demand for Norwegian political autonomy. An act was passed setting up a separate consular service which was repudiated by King Oscar II. In June 1905, the Storting declared 'the union with Sweden dissolved as a result of the King ceasing to function as Norwegian King', confirmed by a plebiscite in August. War seemed imminent for a time, but in October a formal separation was negotiated. In December, Prince Charles of Denmark became Norway's new king as Haakon VII.

Genius of modern physics In 1905, Albert Einstein (1879-1955) published three important papers containing revolutionary theories: that light is a combination of energy and frequency; that the irregular motion of particles in liquid suspension (Brownian Motion) was due to kinetic energy, and finally his special theory of relativity which destroyed the Newtonian concept of absolute time and space and asserted that their measurement was dependent on relative motion. Furthermore, energy (E) was linked with mass (M) and the speed of light (C) the equation E=MC2.
Russia had been at war with Japan over the control of Manchuria and Korea since 1904. On 1 January the naval base of Port Arthur (leased from China by the Russians) fell to the Japanese after a ten-month siege. Three months later the Russian army was defeated in a hard-fought battle at Mukden.

 

BATTLE OF TSUSHIMA 


The final blow was struck in May when the Russian Baltic fleet arrived in the straits of Tsushima, between Korea and Japan, after a journey halfway round the world, only to be utterly destroyed by the Japanese Imperial Navy led by Admiral Togo. Both victor and vanquished were exhausted by the war and ready for peace. The terms of the Treaty of Portsmouth in September 1905 were relatively moderate. Russia gave up Port Arthur and the southern half of Sakhalin Island and recognized Japan's predominant position in Korea. The two powers later agreed to exercise equal influence in Manchuria.

Russian prisoner at Port Arthur, The Russo-Japanese war began in February 1904. The main war zone was the Russian-controlled Port Arthur, an ice-free harbour on the southern tip of the Liaotung peninsula in Manchuria. Japanese successes in blockading and partially destroying the Russian fleet encouraged the landing of troops in June under General Nogi. However, progress south to Port Arthur was delayed by the Russians who were busy fortifying the town. Three months of Japanese assaults proved suicidal so Nogi decided to launch a triple attack on the twin peaks of 203 Metre Hill in November which was gained after 10 days, at a loss of 8,000 men. From this vantage Japanese heavy guns bombarded the Russian fleet and town into submission. The Russian General Stoessel officially surrendered on 2 January 1905.
Defeat further discredited the already unpopular Tsarist regime. The ensuing '1905 Revolution' began on 22 January with 'Bloody Sunday', when a peaceful demonstration of 150,000 workers and their families was fired on outside the Winter Palace. About a thousand were killed and many more wounded. Strikes, demonstrations and peasant risings swept the land, culminating in October, when sailors of the battleship Potemkin mutinied and 200,000 urban workers organized their own representative body, the St Petersburg soviet, soon to be dominated by the fiery personality of 25-year-old Leon Trotsky. The new Prime Minister, Sergei Witte, persuaded the Tsar that the token consultative body (Duma) he had set up was insufficient and wider promises of reform were made.

An immediate sensation, Claude Debussy wrote that his 'music has no other aim than to melt in the minds of predisposed people and to become identified with certain scenes or objects'. The composer was very much alive to the literary and artistic currents of his time, particularly Symbolism and Impressionism. In 1894, he completed a musical equivalent to Mallarme's celebrated Symbolist poem Prelude a l'apres-midi d'une faune, a revolutionary piece of music which was followed 11 years later by his great Impressionist work La mer. This striking musical evocation of the sea found pictorial inspiration in the seascapes of Turner and the prints of the Japanese artists Hokusai and Hiroshige; hence the use of the Hokusai print on the first edition of the work. The careful balance of European power threatened to be undermined during this year by Kaiser Wilhelm II's blustering attempts at world power status. His personal visit to Tangier was an attempt to block the Anglo-French entente cordiale whereby France recognized Britain's position in Egypt while Britain acknowledged French interests in Morocco. The Kaiser's tacit recognition of Moroccan independence only succeeded in strengthening the Anglo-French alliance. Another blow fell when the treaty agreed between Kaiser Wilhelm and the Tsar at Bjorko in Finland later that year was repudiated by ministers on both sides as it conflicted with the terms of the existing Franco-Russian alliance.

A variety of other events characterized 1905. It was the year the great actor-manager Sir Henry Irving, whose knighthood set the seal of respectability on the theatre, died and the Swedish film star Greta Garbo was born. The artists Schmidt-Rottluff and Kirchner founded the expressionist Die Brucke (The Bridge) Group. The British General Election was a land-slide victory for the Liberals, who were to remain in power, introducing a wide range of reforms, up to the First World War. In Dublin, a new militant organization, Sinn Fein, held its first national convention. Franz Lehar's operetta The Merry Widow began its world-wide triumph at Vienna while Richard Strauss's more decadently erotic Salome received its first performance at Dresden; and, not to be outdone, Dr Sigmund Freud published his Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality.

Writer – Marshall Cavendish

Norwegian Great Artist - Edward Munch Painting Gallery

Posted by Art Of Legend India [dot] Com On 10:30 PM 0 comments
Munch was one of the key artists in overthrowing the idea that painting is concerned fundamentally with imitating natural appearances. He depicted man's inner life with an intensity that at times approached frenzy, and his greatest works treat overpowering emotions such as fear and sex (these two often combined) with unprecedented psychological conviction and subtlety. The Scream is the most famous of all his works and the prime example of how he abandoned naturalism to gain emotional impact, and works such as Puberty and Anxiety show how poignantly and eloquently he portrayed the mental conflicts that beset mankind.

After he recovered from a nervous breakdown in 1908, Munch's work became much less introspective. He painted the working people of Norway with great vigour, his landscapes show a new love of Nature, and in his murals for Oslo University he proved himself one of the most glorious decorative artists of the 20th century. 

The Great Artist Edvard Munch Painting “The Sick Child” 1885-86 47' x 46 ¾ National Gallery, Oslo
This painting, of which Munch made several other versions, was inspired by his childhood experiences of sickness and death. Detail is reduced to a minimum, and the eye is immediately drawn to the figure of the child whose pale face contrasts with her red hair. We see both the yearning in the child's eyes and the mother's pain. 










The Great Artist Edvard Munch Painting “Puberty” 1893-59" x 433" National Gallery, Oslo
The awakening of sexual feelings was one of Munch's recurring themes. Adolf Paul, a member of Munch's circle in Berlin, described the work in progress: 'On the edge of the bed a naked girl was sitting. She did not look like a saint, yet there was something innocent, coy and shy in her manner . . . these qualities prompted Munch to paint her.'
The Great Artist Edvard Munch Painting “The Scream” 1893 36x 29 National Gallery, Oslo
'One evening', wrote Munch, 'I was walking along a path, the city on fjord below. I felt tired and ill. . The sun was setting and the clouds turning blood-red. I sensed a scream passing through Nature; it seemed to me that I heard the scream. I painted this picture, painted the clouds as admit blood. The colour shrieked.'











The Great Artist Edvard Munch Painting “Anxiety” 1894 37' x 28 ¾ Munch Museum, Oslo
In the 1902 Berlin Secession exhibition, Munch hung a series of his paintings around four walls of the entrance hall to form his Frieze of Life. Anxiety hung on the same wall as The Scream, a wall representing 'Fear of Life'. 'There was a symphonic effect', wrote Munch, 'it made a great stir a lot of antagonism and a lot approval.
The Great Artist Edvard Munch Painting “The Dance of Life” 1899-1900 49 ½ x 75" National Gallery, Oslo
This is one of the pictures that made up Munch's Frieze of Life, an ambitious series of works that never had a definitive form. 'The frieze is conceived', he wrote, 'as a series of paintings which together present a picture of life. Through the whole series runs the undulating line of the seashore. Beyond that line is the ever-moving sea, while beneath the trees is life in all its fullness, its variety, its joys and sufferings.' Here the dancing figures represent physical desire, but in the midst of passion there is loneliness, and the mournful figure on the right suggests the transitoriness of all feelings.

The Great Artist Edvard Munch Painting “The Sun” 1909-11 178" x 310" Oslo University
Munch's huge murals in the Great Hall of Oslo University were the greatest public commission of his career and he responded with work of inspired boldness. The murals represent the powerful forces of eternity, and here the sun is portrayed as the source of life, its rays illuminating the sea and the rocky landscape of the Kragero fiord.
The Great Artist Edvard Munch Painting “Winter in Kragero” 7972 51 ¼   X 51 ½ Munch Museum, Oslo
When he returned to Norway in 1909, after living mainly in Germany since 1892, Munch spent much of his time at Kragero and he painted some splendid pictures of its rough coastal scenery. This is perhaps the most monumental of them, the vigorous composition dominated by the magnificent form of the pine tree.










The Great Artist Edvard Munch Painting “Workers Returning Home” 1915 79 ½ x 90 ½ Munch Museum, Oslo
This is generally regarded as the most commanding of the series of pictures of workers that Munch painted around this time. Although he was not a politically militant artist, he identified strongly with the working class. He must have been familiar with such scenes since his youth in Grunerlokka, when he lived near a large sailcloth factory.
The Great Artist Edvard Munch Painting “The Lonely Ones” c. 1915 39 x 51 Munch Museum, Oslo
Munch often reworked his compositions over a long period and he had painted a similar picture 40 years earlier, although here the colours have a new electrifying quality. Figures standing on the seashore were one of his favourite themes, suggesting the insignificance and insecurity of man against the magnitude of Nature, and often conveying a sense of isolation and melancholy.



Writer - Marshall Cavendish

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