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A01=Emil Leth Meilvang
A01=Hanne Ørstavik
A01=Lasse Jacobsen
A01=Melania Mazzucco
A01=Patricia G. Berman
Age Group_Uncategorized
Age Group_Uncategorized
Author_Emil Leth Meilvang
Author_Hanne Ørstavik
Author_Lasse Jacobsen
Author_Melania Mazzucco
Author_Patricia G. Berman
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B01=Heidi Bale Amundsen
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=AGB
Category=AGC
COP=Norway
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
Language_Italian
PA=Available
Price_€20 to €50
PS=Active
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Edvard Munch: Il Grido Interiore

The jarring emptiness following the loss of a loved one, the expansive out-of-body sensation of sensual touch, the lassitude of melancholy and the ecstatic receptivity to sunshine. His ability to capture and convey sensation and feelings through the materials of art, places the Norwegian artist Edvard Munch (18631944) at the forefront of European art at the turn of the last century.

Interestingly, Munchs artistic exploration of perception, and his persistent questioning of the objectivity of vision, intersect with ideas that matured within the fields of psychology and experimental optics at the time.

Edvard Munch: Il Grido Interiore examines these connections, demonstrating his continuing exploration of the conditions of sight. The essays in this catalogue examine this phenomenon while also probing a lesser-known aspect of the artists work: Munchs relationship to Italy.

The first essay, Lasse Jacobsens Edvard Munch. Italian Impressions, explores this connection explicitly, as part of a general overview of Munchs life and work.

The second text, Reflections in Munchs Inner Eye by Patricia G. Berman, charts the art historical context of Munchs exploration of experiences subjective dimension. Emil Leth Meilvangs Seeing without Sight. Munchs Vision, on its part, explores the relationship between Munchs artistic development and simultaneous developments within the perceptual sciences. Edvard Munch:Il Grido Interiore includes essayistic pieces by authors Melania G. Mazzucco and Hanne Ørstavik: I am a Romantic and Who Am I. Each demonstrates Munchs continuing ability to light the inner fires of other artists.

Text in Italian.

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Current price €41.39
Original price €44.99
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A01=Emil Leth MeilvangA01=Hanne ØrstavikA01=Lasse JacobsenA01=Melania MazzuccoA01=Patricia G. BermanAge Group_UncategorizedAuthor_Emil Leth MeilvangAuthor_Hanne ØrstavikAuthor_Lasse JacobsenAuthor_Melania MazzuccoAuthor_Patricia G. Bermanautomatic-updateB01=Heidi Bale AmundsenCategory1=Non-FictionCategory=AGBCategory=AGCCOP=NorwayDelivery_Delivery within 10-20 working daysLanguage_ItalianPA=AvailablePrice_€20 to €50PS=Activesoftlaunch
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
Product Details
  • Weight: 1620g
  • Dimensions: 240 x 297mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Sep 2024
  • Publisher: Munch Museum
  • Publication City/Country: Norway
  • Language: Italian
  • ISBN13: 9788284620404

About Emil Leth MeilvangHanne ØrstavikLasse JacobsenMelania MazzuccoPatricia G. Berman

Patricia G. Berman holds the Feldberg Chair of Art at Wellesley College Massachusetts specialising in modern and contemporary art the history of photography and propaganda studies. She has also taught at the University of Oslo where she facilitated the research network Munch Modernism and Modernity. Bermans books and catalogues include studies of Edvard Munch James Ensor 19th-century Danish painting gestural drawing and contemporary art. Her current book project Solar Modernism examines Munchs Sun in relation to the politics and science of the body. Lasse Jacobsen is Munchmuseets research librarian. He has wide experience from several art libraries including SHKS (Oslo National College of Art and Design) the National Gallery in Oslo and The Norwegian Institute in Rome. He has been involved in several projects at the museum e.g. Edvard Munchs texts (eMunch.no) and numerous exhibitions. Jacobsen has also contributed articles for several publications and catalogues i.a. Munch becoming Munch: Artistic Strategies 18801892 (Oslo: Munchmuseet 2008) Edvard Munch: The Modern Eye (London: Tate Publishing 2012) and the childrens book Meet Edvard Munch (Milan: Skira 2013). Melania G. Mazzucco is an internationally acclaimed novelist and essay writer whose work has been translated into 27 languages. She has won multiple literary prizes including the Premio Strega in 2003 for Vita. Many of her books explore art history including a novel and a biography about the painter Tintoretto La lunga attesa dellangelo and Jacopo Tintoretto e i suoi figli (2008 and 2009) and the more recent Larchitettrice which rediscovers historys first female architect Plautilla Bricci. Mazzucco who also writes for theatre and film conceived and wrote the documentary Tintoretto: A Rebel in Venice in 2019. She is a regular contributor to the newspaper La Repubblica. Her next novel Silenzio: Le sette vite di Diana Karenne will be published in 2024. Emil Leth Meilvang is Head of Education and Collections at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen. He specialises in European modernist art and its intersections with scientific discourse. His PhD thesis Ecstatic Life: Biology Surrealism and Theories of Life in Interwar Paris and Copenhagen (University of Oslo 2019) examines the surrealists artistic and conceptual interventions in biology. In 2022 Meilvang co-curated The Savage Eye exhibition at MUNCH exploring connections between symbolism and surrealism. From 2024 to 2027 he will be leading a new research cluster between the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts and Thorvaldsens Museum in Copenhagen focusing on the artists role as teacher in the early 19th century. Hanne Ørstavik made her debut in 1994 with the novel Hakk (Cut) and has since authored 16 novels and a collection of essays. Her contributions to literature have been recognised with several significant Norwegian awards including the Brage Prize for fiction in 2004 the Aschehoug Prize in 2007 the Dobloug Prize in 2022 and most recently the Gyldendal Prize in 2024. Her books have achieved international recognition and translations are available in more than 30 languages. Ørstavik was raised in Finnmark in northern Norway and currently divides her time between Oslo and Milan.

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