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"Edvard Munch the Scream - Bronze Statue"
Weight | 7 kg |
A Vision of Existential Terror – Bronze Sculpture “The Scream” - Signed Edvard Munch
This remarkable bronze Edvard Munch the Scream captures the haunting cry of modern humanity with startling physical presence. The figure stands elongated and fragile, hands clutched to the sides of the head, mouth open in a silent wail that echoes across time. Every jagged contour and deep green patina mirrors the swirling tension of Munch’s original masterpiece. Translating the famous image into three dimensions allows viewers to walk around the anguish, to feel the vibration of despair that first shocked the art world. The sculpture becomes a living echo of the 1893 painting, extending the emotional reach of Edvard Munch the Scream beyond the canvas.
From Painting to Icon
The story of Edvard Munch the Scream begins in 1893 when the Norwegian artist created the first version of the now legendary motif. Over the following years he produced four painted interpretations and a powerful lithograph between 1893 and 1910, each revisiting the same moment of existential dread. This bronze pays homage to that continuing vision, preserving the sense of an infinite scream passing through nature that Munch described in his diary. By rendering the figure in bronze, the artist’s vision gains permanence and tactile immediacy, inviting viewers to experience the panic of the modern soul in sculptural form.
Life and Legacy of the Artist
Edvard Munch, born on 12 December 1863 in Ådalsbruk, Norway, was shaped by a childhood marked by illness and loss. His mother Laura Catherine died of tuberculosis when he was only five, and his father Christian, a military doctor with strict religious views, instilled in him both discipline and deep anxiety. These early experiences of grief and spiritual questioning became central to his art. Munch studied at the Royal School of Art and Design in Oslo and absorbed Symbolist and Post-Impressionist ideas during extended stays in Paris and Berlin. Throughout his career, the themes of love, death, and inner turmoil defined the dramatic emotional language of Edvard Munch the Scream and all his later work.
The Bronze Transformation
This homage to Edvard Munch the Scream is cast using the traditional lost-wax method, ensuring every texture of the original vision remains intact. The rough, almost tree-bark surface recalls the artist’s turbulent brushwork, while the hollow eyes and twisted pose transmit a timeless cry of fear. The green patina suggests the eerie sky of the Oslofjord evening that inspired the artist’s revelation. Turning Munch’s painted anguish into a bronze figure gives his vision a new dimension—one that can inhabit gardens, museums, or private collections as a constant reminder of the fragile human condition.
Presence in Modern Collections
Today, bronze tributes to Edvard Munch the Scream can be found in major museums and sculpture gardens worldwide. The Munch Museum in Oslo and the National Gallery of Norway hold original painted versions and often display sculptural interpretations to highlight the enduring impact of the image. International exhibitions from New York to Berlin have featured three-dimensional homages that allow audiences to encounter the famous scream from every angle. Collectors and art historians alike regard such bronzes as essential companions to the celebrated canvases, embodying the universal anxiety that Munch first expressed more than a century ago.
A Timeless Symbol
The bronze Edvard Munch the Scream stands not only as a homage to the artist but as a universal emblem of human vulnerability. Its anguished figure resonates with viewers facing their own uncertainties, transcending language and culture. Through this sculptural transformation, Munch’s vision continues to speak powerfully to the present, preserving the emotional intensity that made his 1893 masterpiece one of the most recognizable images in art history. Whether displayed indoors or as an outdoor monument, this work ensures that the unsettling brilliance of Edvard Munch the Scream endures in every setting.
Width: 18 cm
Height: 53 cm
Depth: 13,5 cm
Weight: 7 kg
100% Bronze
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