WASHINGTON, DC.- The National Gallery of Art marks the 150th anniversary of the birth of Edvard Munch, Norways most famed painter and printmaker, with an exhibition of more than 20 renowned works from the Gallerys collection. On view from May 19 through July 28, 2013, on the Ground Floor of the West Building, Edvard Munch: A 150th Anniversary Tribute includes Geschrei (The Scream) (1895), The Madonna (1895), and a unique series of six variant impressions, Two Women on the Shore (1898).
In recent decades the National Gallery of Art has presented three major exhibitions of Munchs work, the last in 2010, said Earl A. Powell III, director, National Gallery of Art. We are pleased to bring together these stellar prints and drawings to celebrate this milestone."
Edvard Munch (December 12, 1863January 23, 1944) both absorbed and influenced the work of innumerable artists throughout the world. He is today revered for his passionate visual expression of intense human experiences: Art is your hearts blood, he said. His most famous imagea screaming figure, its eyes wide with horroris an icon of anxiety, alienation, and anguish. Attraction, love, jealousy, and death were also recurring themes. His continual reworking of these subjects is commonly linked to Munchs personal struggles. He made many telling portraits: tender visions of women and sensitive studies of lovers, children, and adolescents. However, the real power of his art lies in his ability to extrapolate universal human experiences from his own life.
Raised in Oslo (then called Christiania), Munch studied at the Royal School of Design before a state scholarship enabled him to study in Paris in 1889. Printmaking was an essential component of Munchs art for 50 years following his introduction to the graphic media in Berlin in 1894. With the capacity to produce multiple works from a single plate, stone, or woodblock, printmaking served to expand the accessibility of the artists themes to the general public and to provide income. Like his repeated revisions in paintings, prints also enabled him to experiment with his imagery; by altering color, line, texture, and composition, Munch drastically changed the appearance and emotional impact of a given subject. Thus a woman kissing a man could appear amorous in one print and predatory in another. In many cases Munch continued to print impressions of his graphic works years after the creation of the original matrix.
The exhibition curator is Andrew Robison, Andrew W. Mellon Senior Curator of Prints and Drawings, National Gallery of Art.