
The story
Edvard Munch could not let his own pictures go. He called them his children, kept the versions he refused to sell, and painted the same haunted images again and again. When he died in 1944 he left the whole hoard to the city of Oslo, around 1,100 paintings, 18,000 prints and thousands of drawings, the core of everything he ever made. The city built a museum around it, opened in 1963.
That made Oslo the one place to see Munch whole, from the several versions of The Scream to The Sick Child and the brooding Madonna. On a Sunday morning in August 2004 two armed men walked in and pulled a Scream and the Madonna off the wall in front of visitors. The paintings were gone for two years before police recovered them in 2006, scarred but repairable.
In 2021 the collection moved into a 13-storey tower on the Oslo waterfront, called simply Munch, where the fragile works rotate in and out of the light a few at a time.
Collection
16 works
VampireEdvard Munch, 1893
AnxietyEdvard Munch, 1894
The KissEdvard Munch, 1897
Christmas in the BrothelEdvard Munch, 1904
Self-Portrait. Between the Clock and the BedEdvard Munch, 1940
Caricature Portrait of Tulla LarsenEdvard Munch, 1905
The Death of MaratEdvard Munch, 1907
SeparationEdvard Munch, 1896
Model by the Wicker ChairEdvard Munch, 1919
GolgothaEdvard Munch, 1900
InheritanceEdvard Munch, 1897
BeachEdvard Munch, 1904
Death and the ChildEdvard Munch, 1899
DespairEdvard Munch, 1894
Eye in EyeEdvard Munch, 1899
Albert KollmannEdvard Munch, 1906