Edvard Munch — "It is not the eye that sees, but the soul."
It is not the eye that sees, but the soul.
It is not the eye that sees, but the soul.
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"The most terrible thing is to feel alone in a crowd."
"Disease, insanity, and death were the black angels that guarded my cradle and accompanied me all my life."
"The camera cannot compete with the brush and palette, it is far too clumsy."
"My art gives meaning to my life."
"Man's life is a journey between two graves."
Norwegian Expressionist painter whose The Scream (1893) became the iconic image of modern existential dread. Closely associated with James Ensor (Belgian Expressionist peer) and Egon Schiele (younger Expressionist heir). For an intellectual contrast, see Pierre-Auguste Renoir, French Impressionist (1841-1919) — Munch and Renoir were exact contemporaries painting the same Belle Époque from opposite emotional poles — Renoir's dappled-light bourgeois pleasure and Munch's anxiety-soaked bourgeois terror are the late-19th-century painting's two halves. The same world; the cleanest emotional inversion.
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