Edvard Munch: Beyond The Scream
Though the Norwegian artist is known for a single image, he was one of the most prolific, innovative and influential figures in modern art
- By Arthur Lubow
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2006, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
In 1898, on a visit to Kristiania, Munch had met the woman who would become his cruel muse. Tulla Larsen was the wealthy daughter of Kristiania's leading wine merchant, and at 29, she was still unmarried. Munch's biographers have relied on his sometimes conflicting and far from disinterested accounts to reconstruct the tormented relationship. He first set eyes on Larsen when she arrived at his studio in the company of an artist with whom he shared the space. From the outset, she pursued him aggressively. In his telling, their affair began almost against his will. He fled—to Berlin, then on a yearlong dash across Europe. She followed. He would refuse to see her, then succumb. He memorialized their relationship in The Dance of Life of 1899-1900, set on midsummer's night in Aasgaardstrand, the seaside village where he once trysted with Millie Thaulow and where, in 1897, he had purchased a tiny cottage. At the center of the picture, a vacant-eyed male character, representing Munch himself, dances with a woman in a red dress (probably Millie). Their eyes do not meet, and their stiff bodies maintain an unhappy distance. To the left, Larsen can be seen, golden-haired and smiling benevolently, in a white dress; on the right, she appears again, this time frowning in a black dress, her countenance as dark as the garment she wears, her eyes downcast in bleak disappointment. On a green lawn, other couples dance lustfully in what Munch had called that "deranged dance of life"—a dance he dared not join.
Larsen longed for Munch to marry her. His Aasgaardstrand cottage, which is now a house museum, contains the antique wedding chest, made for a bride's trousseau, that she gave him. Though he wrote that the touch of her "narrow, clammy lips" felt like the kiss of a corpse, he yielded to her imprecations and even went so far as to make a grudging proposal. "In my misery I think you would at least be happier if we were married," he wrote to her. Then, when she came to Germany to present him with the necessary papers, he lost them. She insisted that they travel to Nice, as France did not require these documents. Once there, he escaped over the border to Italy and eventually to Berlin in 1902 to stage The Frieze of Life exhibition.
That summer, Munch returned to his cottage in Aasgaardstrand. He sought peace, but drinking heavily and brawling publicly, he failed to find it. Then after more than a year's absence, Larsen reappeared. He ignored her overtures, until her friends informed him that she was in a suicidal depression and taking large doses of morphine. He reluctantly agreed to see her. There was a quarrel, and somehow—the full story is unknown—he shot himself with a revolver, losing part of a finger on his left hand and also inflicting on himself a less obvious psychological injury. Prone to exaggerated feelings of persecution—in his painting Golgotha of 1900, for instance, he depicted himself nailed to a cross—Munch magnified the fiasco in his mind, until it assumed an epic scale. Describing himself in the third person, he wrote, "Everybody stared at him, at his deformed hand. He noticed that those he shared a table with were disgusted by the sight of his monstrosity." His anger intensified when Larsen, a short time later, married another artist. "I had sacrificed myself needlessly for a whore," he wrote.
In the next few years, his drinking, which had long been excessive, grew uncontrollable. "The rages were coming more and more often now," he wrote in his journal. "The drink was meant to calm them, especially in the morning but as the day wore on I became nervy, angry." Anguished as he was, he still managed to produce some of his finest work, including a tableau (executed in several versions) in which he uses himself as the model for the slain French revolutionary Marat, and Larsen is cast as Marat's assassin, the grim, implacable Charlotte Corday. His 1906 Self-portrait with a Bottle of Wine, in which he paints himself alone at a restaurant table, with only a plate, a wine bottle and a glass, testifies to intense disquiet. Two waiters stand behind him in the almost empty restaurant, evoking the setting in which he had read of his father's death.
In the fall of 1908, Munch collapsed in Copenhagen. Hearing hallucinatory voices and suffering paralysis on his left side, he was persuaded by his old roommate from the Saint-Cloud apartment, Emanuel Goldstein, to check himself into a private sanitarium on the outskirts of the city. There he reduced his drinking and regained some mental stability. In May, he departed, vigorous and eager to get back to his easel. Almost half of his life remained. Yet most art historians would agree that the great preponderance of his best work was created before 1909. His late years would be less tumultuous, but at a price of personal isolation. Reflecting this view, MoMA devotes less than a fifth of the show to his post-1909 output. "In his later years," explains curator McShine, "there are not as many poignant paintings as there were when he was involved with life."
In 1909, Munch returned to Norway, where he began work on an important series of murals for the assembly hall at Oslo University. Still in place, the Aula Decorations, as the murals are known, signaled Munch's new determination to look on the bright side, in this case quite literally, with a centerpiece of a dazzling sun. In newly independent Norway, Munch was hailed as the national artist, much as the then recently deceased Henrik Ibsen and Edvard Grieg served, respectively, as national writer and composer. Along with his new fame came wealth, but not serenity. Maintaining his distance from an alternately adoring and scornful public, Munch withdrew to Ekely, an 11-acre estate on the outskirts of Oslo that he purchased in 1916 for a sum equivalent to the price of two or three of his paintings. He sometimes defended his isolation as necessary to produce his work. At other times, he implied it was needed to maintain his sanity. "The second half of my life has been a battle just to keep myself upright," he wrote in the early 1920s.
At Ekely, Munch took up landscape painting, depicting the countryside and farm life around him, at first with joyous color, later in bleaker tones. He also returned to favorite images, producing new renditions of some of The Frieze of Life paintings. In his later years, Munch supported his surviving family members financially and communicated with them by mail, but chose not to visit them. He spent much of his time in solitude, documenting the afflictions and indignities of his advancing years. When he was stricken with a nearly fatal influenza in the great pandemic of 1918-19, he recorded his gaunt, bearded figure in a series of self-portraits as soon as he could pick up a brush. In 1930, after a blood vessel burst in his right eye and impaired his vision, he painted, in such works as Self-portrait During the Eye Disease, the clot as it appeared to him—a large, irregular purple sphere. Sometimes he gave the sphere a head and sharp beak, like a demonic bird of prey. Eventually, it flew off; his vision returned to normal.
In Self-portrait Between the Clock and the Bed, which dates from 1940-42, not long before Munch's death, we can see what had become of the man who, as he wrote, hung back from "the dance of life." Looking stiff and physically awkward, he stands wedged between a grandfather clock and a bed, as if apologizing for taking up so much space. On a wall behind him, his "children" are arrayed, one above the other. Like a devoted parent, he sacrificed everything for them.
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Comments (23)
Had a really nice copy when i lived in oregon. I gave it to a friend when i moved back to new mexico. In the evenings after work while relaxing, i remember the intense emotions generated as i would stare at it.I think it is one of the most easily felt paintings i have ever had the pleasure to experiance
Posted by on January 6,2013 | 12:56 AM
Detailed and short, as I like. I don't like to read a lot about people, as in that biography - http://www.fampeople.com/cat-edvard-munch, I just want some facts
Posted by Cate on December 14,2012 | 06:46 AM
Really gripping piece on an extraordinary modern artist and thinker. He's done more for art than will ever be expressed outside the influence of his own work. I watched a film about him a few weeks back and it had a profound effect on me. Here's a (highly recommended) article on the film if anyone cares to have a look... http://www.unsungfilms.com/7103/edvard-munch/
Posted by Theo on September 10,2012 | 02:31 PM
Edvard Munch Born: 12-Dec-1863. Birthplace: Loton, Hedmark, Norway Died: 23-Jan-1944. Location of death: Ekely, Norway Cause of death: Pneumonia... I do believe if you subtract 1863 from 1944 you will come to the number 81. he was 81 when he died not 50...
Posted by Jeff Brine on April 27,2012 | 05:56 PM
what country was the artist from?
Posted by taylah on February 23,2012 | 11:17 PM
Very inspiring...realism and romanticism..both so complex in their own ways... I really hope tgis article can inspire me further to try and create meaningful art.
Posted by pseudonymous Fiore on January 8,2012 | 10:44 PM
...It is impossible Munch died in his Fifities. I read interviews and watched videos of him standing next to his work that reflect a man in his late seventies and eighties. Also political and social events he discussed gives away his age as well.
Posted by s peck on December 5,2011 | 01:58 PM
One of Munch's younger sister was diagnosed with schizophrenia. There are many mental health diagnostic theories as to what Munch may have suffered beyond depression, which is often a compounding feature of other mental health issues. The theories run the gamut ranging from personality disorders to affective disorders to psychotic disorders. In the end, however compelling these theories are, they remain theories that obviously cannot be proven with absolute certainty.
Posted by Natalie Nieves on January 2,2011 | 07:09 PM
it does say wat age he was on death
Posted by armahm2587 on November 1,2010 | 04:33 PM
Many materials state that he had bipolar disorder and was agoraphobic.
Posted by jrk on October 30,2010 | 03:31 PM
Does anyone know what Munch's earlier sister was diagnosed with? I have read that she was diagnosed with a mental disorder at a young age, but as to what it was i am totally unaware.
I really understand The Scream - the sense of entrapment and inner scream as the day draws to a close and darkness closes in.
Was Munch ever diagnosed other than severely depressed?
Posted by Clyde on October 3,2010 | 07:38 AM
edvard died at the age of 81 do the math
Posted by shankeya on May 6,2010 | 08:47 PM
I luv art. The Scream is 1 of my faves. I like edvard munhs artwork. Thnx 4 the info
Posted by marie on May 5,2010 | 03:56 PM
substantial information. Thanks. It helps a lot in my research.
Posted by kim on October 8,2009 | 02:29 AM
80 years old. it is mentioned.
Posted by Jeff on September 13,2009 | 11:12 PM
if people were to read this passage a little more they would know that he died when he was fifty, that he was a recluse and that he was an unmarried yet not unattached man who never bared any children his own other than he art pieces. JUST READ!!!!!
Posted by jen on July 9,2009 | 03:24 PM
Do you know where the scream was first exposed? in other words the place it was first shown after it was completed
Posted by miranda on December 7,2008 | 09:34 AM
My mistake, its 1893 not 1983. realised that as soon as i posted. sorry.
Posted by Bessie on November 14,2008 | 09:11 PM
David - 'The Scream' was finished in 1983, if that's the painting you were reffering to =)
Posted by Bessie on November 14,2008 | 09:10 PM
it doesent say when the painting was painted
Posted by David on November 2,2008 | 08:44 AM
The Scream is prophetic....the roar that he heard, the devastation of what is to come. We are the generation that will see what he had seen. I am reminded of what it must have been like on the shore of Banda Aceh before the tsunami swept everything inland and then out again to the sea. His father was 'religious' and he felt 'guilty' that he was not, tormented by a life that was 'betwixt and between'...the scream would forever haunt him. We can learn from it. Judgment 'day' is not only what is to come, but also takes place in the every day disasters we read about in the news headlines in this Post 911 generation.
Posted by Tricia O'Connor on June 22,2008 | 01:16 PM
The fifth paragraph on page 2 briefly mentions it...
Posted by Donna on May 22,2008 | 10:53 PM
maybe i missed it, but it said nothing about the painting "Ashes". It is the one work that is on the page and they dont mention anything about it...
Posted by christa on May 19,2008 | 09:22 AM
First paragraph on the first page gives details of his death...
Posted by Lioness on December 11,2007 | 06:26 PM
this tells nothing about how old edvard munch was when he died!
Posted by McPhee on December 9,2007 | 10:28 PM