by Gabriella Angeleti
In his debut as a curator,
the Norwegian novelist Karl Ove Knausgård—who penned the six-volume
autobiographical series Min Kamp (My Struggle)—has collaborated with Kari
Brandtzæg, a curator of the Munch Museum in Oslo, to organise an exhibition of
rarely seen works by Munch from the museum’s collection.
Edvard Munch, Apple Tree by
the Studio, 1920-28 (Photo courtesy of the Munch Museum)
Over the past years, the two “worked through
more than 1,000 objects and chose around 140 of them, including some of Munch’s
very few and fragile sculptures”, Brandtzæg says. The exhibition, titled
Towards the Forest: Knausgård on Munch (6 May-8 October), includes lithographs,
woodcuts and paintings, some of which have never been exhibited. The exhibition
aims to provide a “more emotionally charged path into Munch’s artistic
world—with no importance on chronology or biography—from Knausgård’s fresh
perspective, which delivers an untold story about the artist and what he
searched for in his art”, Brandtzæg says.
http://theartnewspaper.com/shows/edvard-munch-gets-novel-treatment-from-karl-ove-knausg-rd/
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