Monday, 19 November 2012
Jim Hanlon: Edvard Munch: Astride Two Eras - Jim Hanlon First Published in Belgravia Aug 2012
Jim Hanlon: Edvard Munch: Astride Two Eras - Jim Hanlon: July 2011 Munch at the Tate Modern Edvard Munch - Puberty The pleasing prospect of seeing expressionist painter Edvard Munch...
Sunday, 18 November 2012
Edvard Munch: Astride Two Eras - Jim Hanlon
July 2011 Munch at the Tate Modern
Edvard Munch - Puberty |
The pleasing prospect of seeing expressionist painter
Edvard Munch at the Tate Modern is immediately one relying on memories of his
many iconic works, such as Vampire, The Kiss and Puberty. The combination of Art Nouveau’s sinuous lines and the
primal colour and application of the Fauvists, characterizes Munch’s enduring
appeal. He is still best known for his images of sexual torment and alienation
but this show reveals the multifaceted Norwegian in a new context of engagement
with the modern world, with rooms devoted to his photography, theatre design
and film making.
Edvard Munch - Vampire |
Edvard Munch’s seminal work The Scream was painted in 1893 by which time he was a well
established artist. The dizzy perspective and exaggerated placement of the figure
in the foreground became a defining characteristic of his output for the next
fifty years. History zooms in on this iconic painting and neglects the huge
body of work Munch carried on producing well into the modern era.
This intriguing exhibition reveals little known
aspects of Munch’s creative life. His fascination with the developments of the
mechanical age is not untypical of his artistic contemporaries. The Norwegian
takes this interest a step further with a considerable output of photography
and even a foray into film-making. Sadly only 5 mins 17 seconds of his footage
survive, demonstrating his delight in experimenting with this new medium. Munch
also explored artistic possibilities of photography in his own unique way with
early prototype cameras. The exhibit includes some of his surviving archive of
244 photographs, taken over 30 years from 1902. The photographic prints are
very small in contrast to the large canvases and this gives them a compelling
intimacy. This autobiographic work often depicts the artist posing with groups
of his paintings, who he famously called his children, in a way that suggests
self-parody. Using unusual angles, motion blur and double exposure, Munch uses
the medium as a means of self examination. There are many striking self
portraits, where Munch depicts himself looking away from or beyond the camera
lens, in sharp contrast to the usual view we have of ourselves directly facing
a mirror. Some are posed naked in his garden and some where he appears to be
holding the camera at arms length, though all seem to suggest a dry self
effacing humor.
Contemporary cinema clips are cleverly juxtaposed with
a group of paintings employing the dynamic compositions inspired by these
technical advances. In Galloping Horse and
Workers On Their Way Home Munch
resonates the dramatic cinematic device of figures moving towards the camera,
with exaggerated perspectives and flickering brush strokes. Munch’s artistic journey is also
charted by his 1906 collaboration with theatre director Max Reinhardt. For a
production of Henrik Ibsen’s Ghosts he
not only produced sketches for furniture and décor but also a series of
paintings depicting scenes from the play, the colour, lighting and
psychological intensity of the interior space enhancing the drama. Munch went
on to explore this dramatic subject matter in a series of compelling paintings
called The Green Room, where
claustrophobic scenes imply a narrative but with little suggestion of the
surrounding sequence of events.
Always keeping abreast with scientific discoveries,
Munch was well aware of new understanding of radio waves, x-rays and
radioactivity. At the beginning of the 19th century lines were blurred between
science, spirituality, clairvoyance and telepathy. Perhaps in response he
played with ghostly double exposures in his photography and in the
extraordinary 1910-13 painting The Sun represented
a transcendent cosmic vision. The artist’s engagement with his contemporary
world led to many paintings of current events, and on a more personal level, of
significant events in his life, like the disturbing Uninvited Guests of 1932-5, one of a series exploring a violent
incident with fellow artist Ludvig Karsten.
Edvard Munch - The Scream |
In seeking to rationalize and quantify the work of Edvard Munch, it’s
too easy to define him by the work he produced in the 1880’s and 1890’s. My own
comfortable impression of Munch was as a symbolist painter of that era, an
impression unchanged for several decades. The Tate Modern’s revisionist show
has challenged that perception entirely. Munch was, it turns out, a man who new
how to laugh.
Tuesday, 27 March 2012
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