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2013/04/26

The Scream of writing review


First of all I have to sharing about writing review which is called "The Scream". The Scream is the popular name given to each of four versions of compositions, created as both paintings and pastels, by the Expressionist artist Edvard Munch between 1893 and 1910. The Scream of Nature is the title Munch gave to these works, all of which show a figure with an agonized expression against a landscape with a tumultuous orange sky. Arthur Lubow has described The Scream as "an icon of modern art, a Mona Lisa for our time." Unfortunately in 1908, Munch suffered a nervous breakdown, after which his portrait paintings forever were changed by this traumatic experience. Form this nervous breakdown came out one of the most significant works of art, along all lines regardless of secular viewpoints.

The Scream is the most important and work known work of art by Edward munch, and has been the subject of many discuss groups, and continues to this day, to be a point of argument and conjecture. The painting is marvelously done in only a few basic and primal colors. This is unusual for work of this time era as many of the competitive and collaborate artist of Munch, used a multitude, almost a plethora of basic colors and joined-mixed colors, too attempt to recreate, the effect of natural beauty in both nature and portraits.

What Munch done is to create a very strong emotional painting and use only a basic set of naturally occurring coloration options. Set near a bridge, and what could have been any number of bridges in Norway of western Europe, the painting shows a man in terror or at least distress, covering his ears, as two individuals are seen walking away. The clouds and the river make The Scream, very interesting to loom at and think about. With so much emotional appeal and so much theory about the cause and effect of The Scream, one would be hard-pressed to find another painting that is so intertwined in controversy, and perfection, all at once.

The Scream, offers a plethora of emotions, from fear and panic, to excitement, and even rage. In the end only Munch truly knows what The Scream is trying to say, and the story has it that he took that to his grave, in 1944. Edward Munch, and The Scream, is two of the most indelible and penetrating works of art in all of the world's portrait painting endeavors. Munch created several versions of the screen and also use several different forms of media, as well here it the Munch museum presently holds two of the painted versions, and one solitary pastel variation of these screen. The National Gallery of Norway holds the only other painted version, which is the one that most people are most readily familiar with. All in all any version of The Scream, by Edward Munch, is a priceless entity and one that will be argued about, till the end of time.

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