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Edvard Munch: Behind the Scream - Critical
acclaim
Publishers Weekly (USA)
'Most famous for his painting The Scream, an iconic
expression of anxiety and a reflection of his inner torment, Edvard
Munch strove to paint his "soul's diary," a quest Prideaux
chronicles incisively in this fascinating study. The first comprehensive
English-language biography of Munch (1863-1944)
presents an in-depth artistic, intellectual and psychological portrait
of the Norwegian artist. A novelist and art historian, Prideaux
(Magnetic North) enlivens her narrative with excerpts from Munch's
diaries,
effectively tracing the roots of this mental suffering: his father's
religious
fanaticism, the death of his mother and favourite sister, the insanity
of another
sister and the fear that he would go mad himself. Prideaux also
charts Much's intellectual influences, his immersion in Nietzsche
and Dostoyevski
and his involvement with a group of radical Norwegian intellectuals,
including Hans Jaeger (a founding father of existentialism), and
his later notable association with the playwright and painter August
Strindberg.
Munch's angst-ridden paintings imbued with fears of sex, illness
and death, shocked the conservative Norwegian public, but found a
receptive audience in Germany and elsewhere in Europe, where the
study of mental
disorders was coming into vogue. This penetrating account of his
life
sheds light on the inner demons that drove him to create these
disturbing images.'
| Publishers Weekly (USA), 22 August 2005 |
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