Publicado por Ishøj, Danmark: Arken Museum, 2000
Librería: BBB-Internetbuchantiquariat, Bremen, Alemania
Softcover/Paperback. Condición: Wie neu. 68 Seiten; farb. Abb. Zustand: wie neu; English summary R-Hh3514 Wenn das Buch einen Schutzumschlag hat, ist das ausdrücklich erwähnt. Rechnung mit ausgewiesener Mwst. da Gewicht in Gramm: 410.
Librería: Hatt Rare Books ILAB & CINOA, Hägersten, Suecia
Sewn as issued, pictorial wrappers in colour. Very fine. Ishøj, Arken, 2001. 4to. 160 pp. Richly illustrated in colour. English language edition, limited to just 2000 copies. - - - Contents: "The Bridge to the 20th Century" by Christian Gether, "Edvard Munch - The Forbidden and the Universal" by Arne Eggum, "Echoes of the Scream" by Holger Reenberg, "Edvard Munch and Norway. Problems of Interpretation" by Per Hordenakk, "Edvard Munch. A Perennially Contemporary Artist? by Gerd Woll, "Angst" by Petra Pettersen, "Images on the Way. Three Drawings by Edvard Munch" by Magne Bruteig. With biography and list of works. - - - Foreword: "It gives great pleasure and delight to ARKEN and the Munch Museum to be able to announce the successful launch of the exhibition Echoes of the Scream, which will be shown at both museums. [.] Echoes of the Scream showcases Edvard Munch's influence on artists in the second half of the 20th century [Marina Abramovic, Asger Jorn, Francis Bacon, Georg Baselitz, Joseph Beuys, Gilbert & George, Jasper Johns, Antonio Saura, Andy Warhol and others]. Munch's mapping out of his own conflict-ridden life in his work from the 1890s anticipated and prefigured several of the central existential issues of the 20th century. In the course of this process, Munch set Man's spiritual conflicts free from a Christian context, creating a series of visual and conceptual models for the portrayal of modern Man's conflicted existence. Through judicious selection, this exhibition elucidates major individual works of art which have been inspired by Edvard Munch.The juxtaposition of these works illuminates significant aspects of the more recent works, which in turn shed new light upon Edvard Munch's art.".