Technically Speaking" offers a chance to see fascinating iterations on a favorite work, and recent gifts to the museum's collection ...
An in-depth look at Edvard Munch’s artistic techniques. See 70 works by renowned Norwegian-artist Edvard Munch at the Harvard ...
Harvard Art Museums’ exhibition of paintings and prints by the Norwegian artist highlights his processes and practice of ...
Walking from the bright, open, sun-lit spaces of the main Harvard Art Museums galleries into the dark emerald walls and rich, oak-wood floors of the “Edvard Munch: Technically Speaking ...
Munch understood personality as "a battleground, created by conflicting desires and repressions": and he pours these internal ...
At his death, in 1944, Edvard Munch left hundreds of artworks to the city of Oslo—enough to fill a dedicated museum and then some. Because Munch had sold well during his long career, plenty more ...
The painter’s portraits reveal less a tortured loner than a man who thrived in company. By Michael Prodger Edvard Munch (1863-1944) was a compulsive portraitist, and an odd one. Portraiture is the ...
The museum’s first exhibition, titled Postcards From the Future, gives a taste of things to come – especially the pieces from its evolving permanent collection, for which 60 per cent of the ...
As Western art’s most memorable utterance of existential pain, Edvard Munch’s The Scream is naturally understood as a definitive glimpse inside the artist’s soul, as much as an embodiment of ...
The Harvard Art Museums newest exhibition, “Edvard Munch: Technically Speaking” (now through July 27), looks at how one artist used inventive techniques across paintings, woodcuts, lithographs ...
The exhibition is the first of its kind in Britain to focus on Munch's portraits and many works, including his 1892 painting of lawyer Thor Lutken, are on show in the country for the first time ...