View allAll Photos Tagged edvardmunch
"Munch's The Scream is an icon of modern art, the Mona Lisa for our time. As Leonardo da Vinci evoked a Renaissance ideal of serenity and self-control, Munch defined how we see our own age - wracked with anxiety and uncertainty."
Fuck knows what inspired me to do this (apart from Munch).
Artwork ©jackiecrossley
© All rights reserved. This image may not be copied, reproduced, distributed, republished, downloaded, displayed, posted or transmitted in any form or by any means, including electronic, mechanical, photocopying & recording without my written permission. Thank you.
The original piece, and a bit about the work and the artist himself. Edvard Munch
This small red pipe cutter seemed to be re-creating "The Scream" similar to the famous painting by Edvard Munch.
I never knew copper pipes felt pain like this! 😂
Just goes to show .... you learn something new every day!
For "Macro Mondays" this week with a theme of 'Tool' I photographed this little 15mm diameter pipe cutter with pipe.
Love & Peace, everyone! 💖
P.S. no pipes were harmed in the making of this image.
Picture from August 2021.
* Canon FTb
* f1.8/50mm «chrome nose»
* HP5+
* D-76 (1+1)
I used this camera and lens: flic.kr/p/2mjXKyp
Hans Jaeger (left), Karl Jensen-Hjell (right) and an admiring in-betweener. Captured at the recent Edvard Munch exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery, London.
Jaeger (1854-1910) was a Norwegian writer, philosopher and anarchist; Jensen-Hjell (1862-88), also Norwegian, was a ‘shabby-elegant, self-assertive, sexually magnetic, notoriously loose-living’ painter. Both enjoyed friendships with Edvard Munch.
I made the Scream by Edvard Munch using LEGO bricks. This is a closeup of the central character covering the ears. Do you like the way curved panels are used for the hands?
Check out the link below for the rest of the build inclusing the background scenery and the Nowegian artist Edvard Munch minifig😱
Please click Support on the LEGO Ideas website to make it a real LEGO set!
ideas.lego.com/projects/cfd88aaa-be60-432d-bd3a-d88516b68387
I made the Scream by Edvard Munch using LEGO bricks. Please check out more and click Support on the LEGO Ideas website to make it a real LEGO set!
ideas.lego.com/projects/cfd88aaa-be60-432d-bd3a-d88516b68387
Omaggio ad Edvard Munch
Dal diario di Edvard Munch:
« Camminavo lungo la strada con due amici quando il sole tramontò, il cielo si tinse all'improvviso di rosso sangue. Mi fermai, mi appoggiai stanco morto ad un recinto. Sul fiordo neroazzurro e sulla città c'erano sangue e lingue di fuoco. I miei amici continuavano a camminare e io tremavo ancora di paura... e sentivo che un grande urlo infinito pervadeva la natura. »
Editing play. Unintentional result is kind of like Edvard Munch's The Scream... ;-)
July 1, 2017.
IMG_4461
Åsgårdstrand is a small port town in Vestfold, Norway. It is also the name of a former independent municipality and a centre of trade. The town is situated 10 km south of Horten, 10 km north of Tønsberg and 100 km south of Oslo by the west coast of the Oslofjord.
Åsgårdsstrand is a summer resort destination with a number of restored old homes. It is home to various cafés, galleries, and a beach. Edvard Munch’s former home is now owned by the municipality and open to the public. It is also home to Borre Kystled, a hiking trail which leads to Borre National Park.
Since the 1920s Åsgårdstrand has been a popular vacation and recreational spot. Visitors come to the small town each summer and spend their holidays in one of the four hotels. From 2007, the town has had the classification of a Tourist Town, which gives the shop owners in the oldest part closest to the sea the right to keep open every day of the week. In order to become a Tourist Town the number of visitors needs to greatly exceed the number of residents throughout the year.
A tree in the grounds of Lauriston Castle, Near Edinburgh, Scotland that bears a striking resemblance to Edvard Munch's infamous 'The Scream' painting.
The lower limbs of this lovely old tree have been polished smooth by generations of children (including my own two) clambering over them.
acrylic on canvas, 2013, 70 x 100 cm
Contemporary nazism
Jan Theuninck is a European painter
www.boekgrrls.nl/BgDiversen/Onderwerpen/gedichten_over_sc...
www.forumeerstewereldoorlog.be/wiki/index.php/Yperite-Jan...
www.graphiste-webdesigner.fr/blog/2013/04/la-peinture-bel...
After cutting a red pepper in half, half for the meal and the other half to go back into the refrigerator for later use, I noticed the one destined for layer had an opening to its interior that, when taken as pert of the whole pepper, evoked an image of Edvard Munch’s The Scream (www.edvardmunch.org/the-scream.jsp ). Either that or a demented, screaming infant. I decided to capture it on a bed of yellow maple leaves, the remnants of the Autumn colours of the tree behind the house. Rorschach test considerations aside, I pictured the combination as a bit of a still life opportunity, as seen here. - JW
Date Taken: 2021-11-25
(c) Copyright 2021 JW Vraets
Tech Details:
Taken using a tripod-mounted Nikon D800 fitted with a Tamron 90mm 1:2.8 Macro, ISO100, Matrix metering, Daylight WB, Aperture priority exposure, f/11.0, 1/6 sec with an EV+0.67 exposure bias to deal with the bright yellow leaves. PP in free Open Source RAWTherapee from Nikon RAW/NEF source file: set final image size to be 9000px wide, darken image overall by setting exposure compensation to EV-0.22, enable Tone Mapping at default levels, apply Dynamic Range Compression at default levels, boost Contrast and Chromaticity and slightly boost Lightness in L-A-B mode, sharpen (edges only), save, then repeat the process but make this version darker to bring out detail in the interior portions of the red pepper. PP in free Open Source GIMP: load the light version as the bottom layer and the darker version as the top layer, add a black layer mask to the top/red pepper layer and paint in the red pepper using white paint and a large soft-edged brush to show the yellow leaves from the bottom layer and the red pepper from the top layer, use the contrast/brightness and the tone curve to optimize each layer independently, do some colour balance adjustment to the bottom/leaves layer to get rid of an excessive green colour cast, create new working layer from visible result, sharpen, save, add fine black-and-white frame, add bar and text on left, save, scale image to 6000 px wide, sharpen, save, add fine black and white frame, add bar and text on left, save, scale image to 3000px wide for posting online, sharpen slightly, save. Sometimes it is just that simple when the shot comes together.
“The Scream”, is an iconic composition created in four versions between 1893 and 1910 by the Norwegian expressionistic artist Edvard Munch. He describes his inspiration:
“One evening I was walking along a path, the city was on one side and the fjord below. I felt tired and ill. I stopped and looked out over the fjord—the sun was setting, and the clouds turning blood red. I sensed a scream passing through nature; it seemed to me that I heard the scream. I painted this picture, painted the clouds as actual blood. The color shrieked. This became ‘The Scream’.”
The 1895 version of “The Scream” sold at auction in 2012 for $120,000,000.
I know this relict bristlecone as the Ghost Tree. It stands at the edge of a ghost forest which is perhaps six thousand years old. The Ghost Tree bears an obvious and uncanny resemblance to “The Scream”.
Note the unnatural gap in the left “arm”. This gap is known in scientific circles as a “sectioning”. A biopsy of sorts, it has been unceremoniously sawn-out and spirited back to a lab, where it can be examined in comfort and at leisure. Not exactly in the same league as taking a sectioning out of “The Scream”, but troubling nonetheless.
More on the ghost forest and sectioning in my photostream: “Ghost Tree II: Conscience”
To view “The Scream”: www.edvardmunch.org/the-scream.jsp
Pour sa réouverture en 2014, Molitor a présenté les œuvres de 25 artistes de street art lors d’une exposition gratuite baptisée « Under The Wave » conçue comme une déambulation artistique à travers Molitor et à la rencontre des œuvres de Balder, Artiste Ouvrier, Fred Calmets, Cadija Costa, Le Consortium, Damien Paul Gal, Diadji Diop, FBZ, Indie 184, JBC, Kan, Kashink, Kouka, William Laboury, Mademoiselle Maurice, Carmen Mariscal, Thomas Mainardi, One Teas, Shuck One, Sly 2, Antoine Stevens, Thom Thom, Remy Uno et Wen-Jié Yang .
Great addition to your interior? 😱
Support it on LEGO IDEAS!!
ideas.lego.com/projects/cfd88aaa-be60-432d-bd3a-d88516b68387
The old Munch museum is now used as the vaccination centre.
I got my 3rd jab today, was waiting 20min afterwards, took this from my seat, at the ceiling a painting/photo of Edvard Munch.
The entrance to the cafe.
Ramme has a diverse history from the Ice Age to the present day. Since the first people came to Ramme in the Stone Age, the fjord and the natural landscape have formed the basis for livelihoods and sustenance. With the steam engine, Vestby and Hvitsten became accessible by train and passenger boat. Hvitsten became a recreation site for visitors from Kristiania (now Oslo). Several well-known artists and literati visited and settled in Hvitsten during the summers.
Norway's most famous painter, Edvard Munch, lived and worked at Nedre Ramme for a number of years from 1910. His time there is little known in Norwegian art history, despite the fact that he painted several of his magnificent works here.