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Art Review Edvard Munch and the painting lost at sea, at Harvard Art Museums By Murray Whyte Globe Staff,Updated March 13, 2025, 4:47 p.m.
Edvard Munch, 1863–1944, was a zeitgeist conductor. Like Dostoyevsky before him, like Kafka after him, he was one of those somewhat hastily assembled humans—the skull plates not stapled down ...
Harvard Art Museums receive major gift of 64 Edvard Munch artworks Gift from longtime donors Philip A. and Lynn G. Straus makes the collection among the most significant in the United States ...
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 ...
Welcome to “Edvard Munch: Trembling Earth” at the Clark, an emphatic, large and definitive exhibition of Munch’s landscape paintings and prints.
Edvard Munch’s The Scream is world famous. The image of a figure, hands to face, letting out an existential shriek, has been endlessly reproduced—on posters, T-shirts, mugs—and made into ...
Rotterdam opener ‘Munch,’ directed by Henrik Martin Dahlsbakken, captures many faces of the man behind ‘The Scream.’ ...
Norwegian police said two people tried in vain Friday to glue themselves to Edvard Munch’s 1893 masterpiece “The Scream” at an Oslo museum and no harm was reported to the painting of a waif ...
The middle section of Dance on the Beach (1906) by Edvard Munch Courtesy of Sotheby's After weathering World War II in a barn tucked away in a Norwegian forest, a monumental Edvard Munch painting ...