Thursday, June 12, 2025

March 22, 2019

Turns Out We’ve Been Misinterpreting One Of The World’s Most Famous Paintings

Edvard Munch's 'The Scream' is one of the most famous images in the art world. Now historians and art buffs are saying we have it all wrong.

It’s one of the most famous images in the history of the arts.

It’s also an artwork with a title that gives us all a pass on having to have any real knowledge of art, because Edvard Munch’s ‘The Scream’ is a painting and etching of a figure screaming.

Add despair, existential dread, and whatever else you can extrapolate to sound pretentious at a dinner party. Done.

Sorry, not done.

According to the British museum we’ve all been getting it wrong.

Here’s CNN:

With “The Scream” Munch is recalling a personal memory of a spectacular sunset in Oslo which gave the sky and clouds a dramatic red hue, according to Giulia Bartrum, curator of a forthcoming exhibition devoted to the artist at the British Museum in London.

“The blood-red sky had the effect of making him feel hugely anxious,” Bartrum told CNN via telephone. “The artwork is very much a reflection of Munch’s personal mood.”

And the artist wrote an inscription in German on the black and white lithograph version which reads: “I felt the great scream throughout nature.”

Hands over its ears, the ghostly figure is in fact blocking out nature’s scream.

No one was going to get that without a bit of help. On the plus side, ‘nature’s scream’ sounds far more impressive than boring old existential dread.

I guess he isn’t a big fan of the serenity of nature, then, although we can all relate to wanting to curl up in a ball and block out the world around us.

This revelation about the actual meaning behind the painting has come about due to an exhibition titled ‘Edvard Munch: Love and Angst’, which runs at the British Museum from April 11 – July 21. It’s set to be the largest exhibition of the artist’s prints in Britain for 45 years.

‘The Scream’ is the highlight, obviously.

[sources:cnn]