You know of Edvard Munch probably for one reason: a painting
commonly called “The Scream.” If you know more than that, you knew more than I,
for sure. I was eager to attend an exhibition of Edvard Munch’s work in Vienna
for no better reason than where it was held. The Albertina Museum is one of the
Habsburg palaces and holds an impressive collection of art by the world’s most renowned
artists. Also, the Albertina is restored and itself an exhibition of the
opulence enjoyed by the Habsburg crew. Munch’s work was there, and I was
reminded of the “two birds…” adage.
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| Ballroom at the Albertina |
The building called “Albertina” (so named in 1921) was
originally constructed on the site of one of the few remaining portions of the
original fortification known as the Augustinian Bastion. Refurbished at least
twice, it was acquired by and renamed for the husband of Maria Christina, a daughter
of Austrian Empress Maria Theresa. While living in Brussels, Duke Albert, the
governor of the Habsburg Netherland, amassed one of the world’s greatest
collections of “old master prints,” (which are now stored at the Albertina, but
are considered too old and too fragile to display and are rarely seen by the
visiting general public). As a result of drawing the short straw with regard to
WWI, the ownership of the Albertina and the massive collection of over
1,000,000 pieces of art were transferred from the Habsburgs to the Austrian
government in 1919.
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| Man and Woman, E. Munch |
Edvard Munch, (pronounced “moonk”) was born in 1863 in
Norway and died there in 1944. His art was profoundly influenced by family
misfortune, his mental illness, and his excessive dependence on alcohol. “The
Scream” was one piece in a series of paintings known as “The Frieze of Life”.
With titles including, Melancholy, Anxiety, and Jealousy, it is not hard to
understand the angst from which he surely suffered. He once wrote: I see all
people behind their masks: pale corpses restlessly hurrying along a winding
path, the end of which is death.
Upon returning to Holland and still having vacation time to
explore Amsterdam, it seemed only fitting to attend an exhibition at the Van Gogh Museum
(pronounced “fan hock moo-say-um” by the Dutch, but only the Dutch and God know
how to hock up the “gh” sound at the end of Gogh) titled, “Munch/Van Gogh: The
similarities and connections between two iconic artists.” Although van Gogh was
born ten years earlier, their lives overlapped. Both men were reared by
zealous, devoutly religious parents. Both lived in Paris, although there is no
evidence they ever met. Because the same circle of influential artists knew
both men, it is likely that they were aware of each other.
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| Madonna, E. Munch |
Both suffered from mental illness and both are known to have
intentionally injured himself—van Gogh famously cutting off part of an ear after
an argument with Paul Gauguin; and Munch shooting himself in the hand after a
lovers’ quarrel. Munch died at 81 after seeing the world ignite twice. Van Gogh
killed himself at age 37—his entire body of work completed in only ten years.
They seem like a mismatched match made in artists’ heaven. Because he lived so
long, Munch knew van Gogh’s work well. Munch wrote in 1933, “During his short
life van Gogh did not allow his flame to go out. Fire and embers were his
brushes during the few years of his life, whilst he burned for his art. I have
thought, and wished—in the long term, with more money at my disposal than he
had—to follow in his footsteps.”
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| The Sick Child, E. Munch |
Here’s what I took away: both van Gogh and Munch created
jaw-dropping works of art worthy of the singular renown reserved for the rare
talents they were; and both created art that makes me wonder why and how some of their work could come from the same brushes as their masterworks. By the time Munch
died, his art in no way resembled the work of his youth. He was a dark, sullen
man who, as he once admitted, painted from his memory, and his memories were
haunted by the deaths of his mother when he was only four years old, his sister
when she was fifteen; and his brother at age thirty. Like Munch himself,
another of his sisters was institutionalized for mental illness.
The similarities between the two men seem obvious. Clearly, dark, sinister sides haunted both men, but both men used the struggle to achieve greatness, but a pair of quotations might best express one of their differences. Vincent van
Gogh once wrote: Anyone who loves an ordinary, everyday person and is
loved (in return) is happy—despite the dark side. Edvard Munch spoke of love this way:
The ancients were right to compare love to a flame, for like a flame, love only
leaves ashes behind.
(Note: In 1987, van Gogh’s Portrait of Dr. Gachet sold at
auction for $82,500,000, making it the highest priced work of art ever at the
time. In 2012, The Scream sold at auction for more than $119,000,000. To date
the highest priced work of art is When Will You Marry? by Paul Gauguin, which
sold for $300,000,000.)
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| Portrait of Dr. Gachet |
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| When Will You Marry? |
I feel better now that I've had my history lesson for today. When do you have time to research & write?
ReplyDeletePeggy, have you forgotten Jays reply to this already? We all have the same amount of time? 😄
DeleteAlthough we all do, in fact, have exactly the same amount of time, some of mine has been spent on airplanes, in airports, and the far end of a rented couch, where the business end of my pen was employed. Thanks Peg, glad you like it.
ReplyDelete