News

Others will embrace damage and destruction: the painter Carole Robb is brutal when it comes to destroying works she’s not happy with, and Edvard Munch’s dealer was regularly in despair as paintings ...
A look at Edvard Munch’s artistic techniques, a BBQ museum, and clothes for wet getaways Travel news you can use By Kari Bodnarchuk Globe Correspondent,Updated April 3, 2025, 10:00 a.m.
Edvard Munch at the National Portrait Gallery: studies in love and revenge Munch’s little seen portraits prove to be remarkable odes to the people who influenced him, as well as wicked takedowns ...
A new exhibition of portraits by Edvard Munch has opened in London, shining a light on an important aspect of the Norwegian painter’s work and his life. Meanwhile, in the United States, the ...
In 1901, Edvard Munch’s “Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones),” a chillingly enigmatic 1892 painting of a man and woman — Husband and wife? Lovers? Complete strangers? — poised on a rocky ...
Munch himself turns towards us, mid-conversation, against a zinging yellow background in Torvald Stang and Edvard Munch (1909-11).
A new exhibition of portraits by Edvard Munch opens in London this week, shining a light on an important aspect of the Norwegian painter's work and his life.
“Edvard Munch: Technically Speaking” offers a chance to learn about Munch’s innovation in artmaking and engage with his works in a new way.
The Harvard Art Museums received a bequest of 62 prints and two paintings by Norwegian artist Edvard Munch, an addition that makes the museum’s collection of Munch’s work one of the largest in ...
A group of works by Edvard Munch has been gifted to Harvard Art Museums by late collectors Lynn Straus and her husband, Philip Straus.
Norwegian independent label Smalltown Supersound is celebrating its country’s most famous artist, Edvard Munch, with a new compilation in his honor. The painter — best known for The Scream ...
But, for the most part, Munch’s emotionally-honest subject matter, such as death, despair, and temporary insanity, are too prone to upset the oftentimes delicate sensibilities of the art-viewing ...