We want time machines. We want to rewind reality to see events a second time, or even to change things. This desire may well undergird the whole idea of representational art. Remember when we killed ...
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 ...
What the Gallery Says: “This exhibition of photographs, films, and a small selection of prints by Edvard Munch emphasizes the artist’s experimentalism, examining his exploration of the camera as an ...
Edvard Munch’s parents, a brother and a sister died when he was young, which goes a long way toward explaining the obsession with misery, sickness and death in his paintings, the most famous of which ...
That may change with “Edvard Munch: Between the Clock and the Bed,” SFMOMA’s new exhibit that — thanks largely to the museum’s collaboration with Norway’s Munch Museum — looks at the artist’s entire ...
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 ...
Edvard Munch’s black-and-white lithograph The Scream (1895) has already garnered headlines ahead of the British Museum’s exhibition on the Norwegian artist’s prints, which opens this week. But Giulia ...
Most people can name just one work by Norway's most famous artist, Edvard Munch. It's "The Scream," of course, which is actually a series — four versions of a single composition. The paintings ...
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 ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about fashion, beauty and home décor. “We established this prize to go to a young artist with an international reputation, ...
When the video game Bloodborne dropped players into the deep end and ignored their cries for help, it joined a tradition of challenging work that outraged audiences. By Ethan Davison A promising ...