Marlene Dumas juxtaposes her own works with works by Edvard Munch, assembling what she describes as ‘a love story about tenderness, passion and agony.’Dumas’s personal experience of Munch’s art is the starting point for this book. •Dumas and Munch TOBN • Bio Munch • Bio Marlene Dumas • Illustrations.
How we all struggle with love, alienation and death.’Table of ContentsOmega’s Eyes • Alpha and Omega • Smoking and Drinking • Sunset and Moonrise •Jealousy and Anxiety • Venus and Adonis • Epilogue MD • Postscript MD • Moonrise.
Now Dumas wants to peel away the anecdotes and myths about Munch, and instead direct attention to how he painted modern love stories, ‘not just between men and women, but also between people and nature. ‘I’ve always said that I wanted to paint love stories, and here was Munch doing just that many years before me,’ she writes.
According to Dumas, it is Munch’s lines that ‘carry the emotion.’Dumas’s encounter with Alpha and Omega made her aware that she had an affinity with Munch.
She liked the vitality of Munch’s line, and wanted to create images with the same type of energy.
In 1981 she saw the Alpha and Omega lithographs at the Munch Museum, and the series made a strong impression on her.
According to Dumas, she ‘wasn’t drawn to a man who was celebrated for having represented all women as vampires.’ She believes the media’s emphasis on his complicated relationship with women overshadowed his artistic abilities, but gradually she began to view his art differently.
During her youth, she was fascinated by the anxiety in his subject matter, but in the beginning of her own artistic career, there was a period of time in which she didn’t regard him as quite as relevant as he’d once been.
Marlene Dumas juxtaposes her own works with works by Edvard Munch, assembling what she describes as ‘a love story about tenderness, passion and agony.’Dumas’s personal experience of Munch’s art is the starting point for this book