Edvard Munch's House
by Randi Grace Nilsberg
Title
Edvard Munch's House
Artist
Randi Grace Nilsberg
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
"Walking in Aasgaardstrand is like walking among my paintings - I get so inspired to paint when I'm in Aasgaardstrand" - Edvard Munch
This little house in Aasgaardstrand, Norway is where Edvard Munch spent most of his summers from 1897 to 1906.
We want more than a mere photograph of nature. We do not want to paint pretty pictures to be hung on drawing-room walls. We want to create, or at least lay the foundations of, an art that gives something to humanity. An art that arrests and engages. An art created of one's innermost heart." (E.M.)
Edvard Munch, Norway's most popular artist, was a painter, lithographer, etcher, and wood engraver. He is looked upon as one of the most significant influences on the development of German and Central European expressionism. Munch's convulsed and tortuous art was formed by the misery and conflicts of his time, and, even more important, by his own unhappy life. Childhood tragedy, intense and dramatic love affairs, alcoholism, and ceaseless traveling are reflected in his works, particularly in paintings like The Sick Child, The Scream, and Vampire. Munch's pictures show his social awareness and his tendency to express, as in Puberty, many of the basic fears and anxieties of mankind.
Edvard Munch became a celebrity in Germany overnight when the inclusion of his works caused the closing of the Verein Berliner Künstler exhibition of 1892. His man-destroying Vampire was decidedly "objectionable." He lived and worked in Germany for many years, exerting thereby a tremendous influence on German artist circles.
Uploaded
June 20th, 2013
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Comments (21)
D Perry Lawrence
randi- a great job transforming thi. what super colors and textures in the sky. it would be nice even not knowing whose house it was v/f
Joe Jake Pratt
I wonder how that architecture influenced his work. doesn' look like there was much light getting in. Maybe that's why he did 'Primal Scream' ? maybe in the middle of a Norwegian winter. In my political gallery is his famous piece with an IRS spin to it. Someone had it on their poster at the first Tea Party held in Kerrville, Texas.
Karen Adams
Such a cool image! Love the bright light illuminating the house and the textures are wonderful fav/v9
Erika Weber
I like this one a lot. Love how you draw us in with the stone wall and the light and by way of the fence we exit. Great image. Voted.