The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Saturday, May 25, 2013
 
Sotheby's London presents one of the most famous masterpieces in the world
Staff stand guard by Edvard Munch's 'The Scream' as it is hung for display at Sotheby's Auction Rooms in London, Thursday, April 12, 2012. The picture made with pastels is one of four versions of the composition, and dates from 1895, it will be auctioned in the Impressionist and Modern Art Sale in New York on May 2, with an estimated price of 80 million dollars. AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth.
LONDON.- Sotheby’s today presented Edvard Munch’s masterpiece The Scream will lead its Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale in New York on 2 May 2012. The iconic work is one of the most instantly recognizable images in both art history and popular culture, perhaps second only to the Mona Lisa. The present version of The Scream, which dates from 1895, is one of four versions of the composition and the only version still in private hands. It will be on view in London for the first time ever, with the exhibition at Sotheby’s opening on 13 April. In New York, and also for the first time ever, it will be on exhibition at Sotheby’s in advance of the sale beginning 27 April. The work is owned by Norwegian businessman Petter Olsen, whose father Thomas was a friend, neighbor and patron of Munch.

“Munch’s The Scream is the defining image of modernity, and it is an immense privilege for Sotheby’s to be entrusted with one of the most important works of art in private hands” commented Simon Shaw, Senior Vice President and Head of Sotheby’s Impressionist & Modern Art department in New York. “Instantly recognizable, this is one of very few images which transcends art history and reaches a global consciousness. The Scream arguably embodies even greater power today than when it was conceived. At a time of great critical interest in the artist, and with the 150th anniversary of his birth in 2013, this spring is a particularly compelling time for The Scream to appear on the market. For collectors and institutions, the opportunity to acquire such a singularly-influential masterpiece is unprecedented in recent times.”

Mr. Shaw continued: “Given how rarely true icons come to the market it is difficult to predict The Scream’s value. The recent success of masterpieces at Sotheby’s suggests that the price could exceed $80 million.”

“I have lived with this work all my life, and its power and energy have only increased with time,” said Petter Olsen, the consignor of The Scream. “Now however, I feel the moment has come to offer the rest of the world a chance to own and appreciate this remarkable work, which is the only version of The Scream not in the collection of a Norwegian museum. My father Thomas Olsen was a friend of Munch, and acquired The Scream as well as many other works by the artist. He hoped that his collection would further Munch’s international renown by lending to exhibitions abroad. In that tradition, proceeds from this sale will go toward the establishment of a new museum, art centre and hotel on my farm Ramme Gaard at Hvitsten, Norway. It will open next year in connection with the Munch 150th anniversary, and will be dedicated to the artist’s work and time there. We are restoring his house and studio, and guests can stay in his home.”

Mr. Olsen added, “I am concerned as an environmentalist about man’s relationship with nature, and I feel The Scream makes an important statement about this.” “I was walking along the road with two Friends / the Sun was setting – The Sky turned a bloody red / And I felt a whiff of Melancholy – I stood / Still, deathly tired – over the blue-black / Fjord and City hung Blood and Tongues of Fire / My Friends walked on – I remained behind / – shivering with Anxiety – I felt the great Scream in Nature – EM”
– The artist’s hand-painted inscription on the frame of the present work

As the defining image of the Expressionist movement, The Scream stands as a pivotal work in the history of art. Munch created the image in the mid-1890s as the central element of his celebrated Frieze of Life series. The powerfullyrendered, blood red sky presents the viewer with the reality of Munch’s experience at the moment he is gripped by anxiety in the hills above Oslo. Like his Dutch contemporary Vincent van Gogh, Munch’s desire was to paint a new form of reality rooted in psychological experience, rather than visual. It is this projection of Munch’s mental state that was so artistically innovative – a landscape of the mind, whose impact is still felt in the art of today.

An icon of global visual culture, The Scream is instantly recognizable – from Beijing to Moscow to New York. Since its creation at the turn of the 20th century, the provocative work has only gained relevance and impact over time. The haunting composition stands as the visual embodiment of modern anxiety and existential dread, referenced by everyone from Andy Warhol to The Simpsons. Edvard Munch and The Scream have been the subject of countless books, scholarly articles, films and museum exhibitions.

Munch created four versions of The Scream. The prime example, worked in 1893 from tempera and crayon on board, is in the National Gallery of Norway; another pastel version from the same year is thought to be a preliminary sketch for the work, and is owned by the Munch Museum in Oslo; the present work from the Olsen Collection, created in 1895 from pastel on board, most closely follows the prime composition in the National Gallery; and a later version in tempera and oil on board, thought to be completed in 1910, is also in the collection of the Munch Museum. In addition, Munch created a lithograph of the image in 1895, which helped initiate the process of its mass proliferation.

Of the four versions of the work, the present The Scream is distinguished in several remarkable ways: it is the most colorful and vibrant of the four; the only version whose original frame was hand-painted by the artist to include his poem detailing the work’s inspiration; and the only version in which one of the two figures in the background turns to look outward onto the cityscape. This version has never before been on public view in either the UK or US, except briefly in the National Gallery in Washington D.C. decades ago.

The Scream has been in the collection of the Olsen family for over 70 years. Thomas Olsen, scion of the great ship-owning dynasty, was a collector and supporter of Munch from the late 1920s. Olsen and the artist were neighbors at Hvitsten in Norway, where the young businessman’s role grew from friend to patron and eventually to protector of his works.

After Hitler rose to power, Munch found himself among the artists whose work was declared degenerate by the Nazi regime and his works were stripped from the collections of the great federal and state galleries across Germany. Olsen was instrumental in rescuing 74 of these de-accessioned art works from Germany, thus saving them from probable destruction. Of the Munch works that Olsen successfully rescued from the Nazis, he presented Tate Britain with Munch’s The Sick Child and the Oslo City Hall with The Tree of Life, both in 1939, because after conversing with Munch he knew that the artist felt the need of recognition in Western Europe, especially so after the advent of Hitler. Before Olsen and his family fled Norway for Great Britain in May 1940, he transported his collection – including the present work – to Vaagaa in central Norway, where it was stored in a neighbor’s hay barn until Norway’s liberation in 1945.

The Scream’s cultural resonance has been underscored further by two high-profile thefts. In 1994, at the start of the Olympic Winter Games in Lillehammer, Norway, two thieves entered the National Gallery of Norway and fled with the museum’s 1893 version of The Scream. A successful sting operation brought the work back to the museum later that year, unharmed. A decade later, masked gunmen stole Munch’s 1910 version of The Scream as well as his Madonna from the Munch Museum, also in Oslo. Both works were recovered two years later, and were back on exhibition in 2008.



Last Week News

April 12, 2012

Smithsonian National Museum of American History opens new US history timeline

Rembrandt self-portrait from Kenwood House, London, on view in the United States for the first time

Works from private collections and institutions to highlight Christie's sale in New York

Judge to decide dispute over three bundles of artwork by James Castle found in home in Boise

Bernardo Laniado-Romero appointed new Director of the Museu Picasso de Barcelona

Exhibition of ceramic and marble works by Ai Weiwei opens at Lisson Gallery Milan

Recently discovered work of Vivian Maier on view at Steven Kasher Gallery in New York

Sturtevant, who was ridiculed when she made her debut in 1965, exhibits at Moderna Museet

Pinta to introduce artists from Spain and Portugal as it launches its third year in London

Two Chinese artifacts worth $3.2 million stolen from Durham University's Oriental Museum

Exhibition shows the great diversity and richness of Russian contemporary art

"Grateful Dead: The Long, Strange Trip" opens at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum

Bonhams announces it will hold three June native American art auctions in San Francisco

Google partners with SCAD Museum of Art and Gibbes Museum of Art on innovative Google Art Project

London Original Print Fair to host 80th birthday celebrations for Sir Peter Blake

Civil War museum gives severed arm a good look

Furniture from the Reign of Henry VIII at Bonhams "Beedham Oak Sale 1450-1750" in Chester

Italy's museum czar: Culture can save the economy

Game Room: An exhibition of new sculpture by artist Michael Combs at Jonathan Ferrara Gallery

1823 printing of Declaration of Independence brings $597,500 in New York auction

April 11, 2012

Ellsworth Kelly installs his sculpture on the grounds of the new Barnes Foundation

Metropolitan Museum exhibition explores origins of ancient Egyptian art

Eykyn Maclean New York presents Cy Twombly: Works from the Sonnabend Collection

Christie's announces its forthcoming Antiquities and The Groppi Collection sale

Andy Warhol: Late Self-Portraits opens in Sheffield as part of Artist Rooms on tour with the Art Fund

LACMA presents first solo museum exhibition in Los Angeles of photographer Daido Moriyama

Sotheby's London to sell 18 monumental works from the Jerwood Sculpture Collection

Important still life of flowers by Roelant Savery is top lot at Koller Auktionen in Zurich

Former President Gerald Ford graffiti pops up recently along east I-196 in West Michigan city

Rolling Stone Ron Wood presents "Faces, Time and Places" at a gallery in New York

Twelfth edition of Master Drawings London to take place between 27 June- 5 July

Phyllida Barlow selects works by 13 artists based in London for new exhibition at Baltic

Competition to find Earhart hot as the 75th anniversary of her disappearance approaches

Sales of Kinkade artwork surge after painter dies

Louvre Museum & Nintendo join forces to release the audio guide Louvre-Nintendo 3DS

Seminal works from throughout Hans-Peter Feldmann's career on view at the Serpentine Gallery

Andy Warhol: Portraiture and the Business of Art, an exhibition at the La Salle University Art Museum

Buddhist Art and its Conservation: New MA programme at The Courtauld Institute of Art

PULSE New York 2012: A leading art fair dedicated to international contemporary art, from May 3-6

Exhibition of recent paintings by Mira Schor on view at Marvelli Gallery

April 10, 2012

Exhibition of paradises and landscapes in the Thyssen Collection opens in Málaga

MoMA presents the first live retrospective of electronic music pioneers Kraftwerk

National Gallery of Art acquires major work by Simon Hantai; Warhol celebrated portfolio

The New York Public Library digitizes thousands of early American historic documents

Dino tracks lead to phenomenal Martian rock in Chait's May 6 Natural History auction

Australia's largest public collection of the work of Joseph Beuys goes on view at University Art Gallery

Georgia's Culture Ministry announces Josef Stalin museum being remodeled to focus on his atrocities

First major retrospective of Fred Williams’s work in over 25 years on view at the National Gallery of Victoria

Documents discovered by museum curator reveal Catalina Island's earliest history

Deputy Director for Art and Education at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art steps down

Milwaukee Art Museum acquires major work by London-based Contemporary artist Isaac Julien

Christie's New York opens the spring jewelry auction season with $40 million sale

Finalist designers and architects emerge in competition to redesign National Mall sites

Jannis Kounellis exhibits new site specific work at the Museum of Cycladic Art

Museum of Arts & Sciences announces new Executive Director

Trove of high-grade signed Babe Ruth baseballs highlight Heritage Auctions' largest sports event to date

Inaugural edition of the Dhaka Art Summit 12-15 April 2012 in Dhaka, Bangladesh

Gallery showcases important Queensland potters

Runner's death adds poignancy to Pa. photo exhibit

Reported change at a church mystifies Macedonia

April 9, 2012

Titanomania: New SeaCity Museum in Southampton charts obsession with Titanic

Columbia Museum of Art announces major upcoming Impressionist exhibition

British artist Damien Hirst set to unveil new work at Affordable Art Fair, April 18-22, NYC

The window in art since Matisse and Duchamp on view at the Kunstsammlung NRW

Archives of American Art contributes to Syracuse University Library's Marcel Breuer digital archive

Chaumont-sur Loire opens exhibition exploring the relationship between artistic creation and nature

Los Angeles looks to revive mythic past with streetcars in four-mile Broadway-to-Figueroa loop

Future unclear for World Trade Center 45,000-pound sphere that survived 9/11 attacks

History in the Making: Sketches for iconic paintings on view at Hadrien de Montferrand Gallery

Spring season opens at the Monterey Museum of Art with new exhibitions including over 150 works

Smithsonian scientists discover new threat to birds posed by invasive pythons

Art 43 Basel announces Art Statements sector: Twenty-seven solo shows by emerging artists

New outdoor sculpture by Jim Hodges to be installed at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis

Kaminski Auctions sells the collection of a prominent Boston Art Deco collector

Pinocchio welcomes visitors to the Cincinnati Art Museum

The Public Theater to unveil revitalized downtown home this fall

New York 20th Century Art and Design Fair to honor American design pioneer Paul McCobb

Cost to pack state park artifacts will cut savings

Cruise ship to retrace voyage of Titanic

April 8, 2012

Popular painter Thomas Kinkade, who built an art empire but drew critical scorn, dies

Fifty-one galleries will participate with comprehensive programs in the Berlin Art Weekend from 27-29 April

"Portraits of Renown: Photography and the Cult of Celebrity" at the J. Paul Getty Museum

Chinese art by Qi Bashi from Wen Tsan Yu Collection brings $2.6 million at Kaminski Auctions

Archaeologist says modern sacrifice rituals in the Levant reveal diversity of beliefs

Phillips de Pury & Co. announces superb results from the New York April Photographs Auction

The Franklin Institute in Philadelphia breaks ground on Nicholas and Athena Karabots Pavilion

Gallery to bring Medieval and Renaissance manuscripts to New York International Antiquarian Book Fair

Architect and artist Maya Lin produces a special artwork representing Pittsburgh's 3 Rivers

National Portrait Gallery announces four artists shortlisted for BP Portrait Award 2012

Austrian artist Gerwald Rockenschaub, Plattform (2012) on view at Vienna's Secession

Princeton University Art Museum debuts first mobile app: Princeton and the Gothic Revival

Luis Gispert combines elements of photography, sculpture, and installation at OHWOW

Pace University art professor awarded grant to research link between augmented reality and viewer response

Utah-based artist highlighted in series of global contemporary art

In tough times, British artists hit the streets

Frédérique Chauveaux and Michael McCarthy explore the human form at Galerie Duboys

Schantz Galleries to exhibit the work of Martin Rosol at SOFA NY

Angry 'gladiators' climb Colosseum in Rome protest

April 7, 2012

Bonhams auction in New York City on April 15 offering Titanic-related artifacts

The Hood Museum of Art explores José Clemente Orozco's impact on Jackson Pollock's early work

Van Gogh's Portrait of Peasant to go on public view in NYC for the first time in forty years

Secret of Vermeer's blue uncovered: 'Woman in Blue Reading a Letter' fully restored by the Rijksmuseum

African, Oceanic, and Pre-Columbian art to be offered at Sotheby's in New York on 11 May 2012

Timothy O'Sullivan Photography exhibition opens at Nelson-Atkins Museum

Columbia Museum of Art announces major gift of nearly 600 works from Dorothy and Herbert Vogel

Increased attendance and extraordinary sales reported at the AIPAD Show New York

Sweden's Nationalmuseum acquires a number of silver pieces made by Gustaf Mollenborg

Solo exhibition of new paintings, sculptures and installation by Valerie Hegarty opens at Marlborough Chelsea

Around the world, architects and city planners answer to rising seas: floating homes

Finest Fr. 1179 $20 1905 gold certificate could top $120,000 in Heritage Auctions' event

BMW Guggenheim Lab to open in Berlin's Prenzlauer Berg neighborhood in June

MIT dedicates monumental sculpture by internationally renowned artist Cai Guo-Qiang

New project of Anna Tsouloufi-Lagiou deals with concepts and issues related to contemporary biopolitics

Wreck of Titanic to be protected by UNESCO

John Max Rosenfield named 13th recipient of the Charles Lang Freer Medal

Spectacular Kashmir sapphire ring, the rarest sapphire of all, could bring $250,000+ at Heritage Auctions

Ohio rabbi's books tied to Holocaust survivors

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Jackson Pollock work "Number 19, 1948" sells for record $58.4 million at Christie's

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Belize City officials say ancient thirty-meter high Mayan pyramid razed for road fill

4.- Hidden drawings from Nazi concentration camp on display at Jewish Museum in Berlin

5.- Records fall at Sotheby's contemporary art auction; Barnett Newman painting sells for $43.84M

6.- Death mask of Napoleon to be auctioned at Bonhams' Book, Map and Manuscript sale

7.- New Yorkers unnerved by neighbor's voyeuristic photos on view at Julie Saul Gallery

8.- Rare Vincent Van Gogh sketchbook copies up for unprecedented sale at museum store and online

9.- Leonardo DiCaprio environmental art auction at Christie's New York tops $38 million

10.- Hong Kong cries fowl as giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman deflates



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site