Edvard Munch (1863 - 1944)

The Sick Girl

Title
The Sick Girl
Dating
1896
Material/Technique
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
Mått 121,50 x 118,50 cm Ram 148,00 x 146,00 x 14,50 cm
Inventory number
GKM 0975
Acquisition
Purchase, 1933
Description
The Sick Girl (1896) harkens back to his sister Sophie’s death from tuberculosis in 1877 at the age of 15. A girl sits upright in a chair, her thin body supported on a large white pillow. She turns her bright, almost transparent face to the right, where a woman with dark clothes and black hair is seated, her head lowered. The girl rests her right hand on the green blanket while the darkly dressed woman raises her tightly clenched fist. The girl’s red hair curls close around the head. She seems weak from illness. Yet it is she who has drawn herself up, a radiant, almost saintly figure, while the woman, failing to hide her grief, has collapsed into a dark shadow. The motif is blurrily done in greenish-blue colours with a tangle of brushstrokes and lines drawn in the paint, while the canvas’s surface is emphasized by large, summary forms, partially outlined. Although The Sick Girl reflected Munch’s personal background, there are plenty of examples of other artists who worked on similar subjects, including Christian Krohg. The prevalence of tuberculosis meant that illness and death at a young age were not unusual. As a motif, it lent itself to incorporation in social-realist statements. Yet where other painters observed the naturalistic conventions of the times, Munch teased out a vibrant vision with strong emotional impact. He revisited the motif six times over a number of years. The first, done in 1885–6, was exhibited at the Autumn Exhibition in Kristiania in 1886. In subsequent versions, which shared the same composition, the brushwork became freer, the colours and the contrast were increased, and the forms softened. The version in the Gothenburg Museum of Art was painted in Paris in 1896 at the request of the Norwegian collector and patron Olaf Schou. Munch still had the first version in his studio to work from. This second painting is more fluid, with stronger contrasts than the first. Possibly Munch is showing the influence of recent French developments—as with the Impressionists, the motif is more suggested than presented, and as with Synthetists, the volume of the forms is stressed in large, well-defined fields. Schou donated the painting to the National Gallery in Oslo, which in 1931 traded it for the first version. The Gothenburg Museum of Art was able buy Schou’s Paris version for 18,000 kronor in 1933. Kristoffer Arvidsson from The Collection Gothenburg Museum of Art, Gothenburg 2014
Signature/Inscription
Signature: EMunh [sic!] 1896
Exhibition History
New York, The Museum of Modern Art, 17/02/2006 - 08/05/2006 Göteborg, Göteborgs konstmuseum, 28/09/2002 - 06/01/2003, no. 18
Literature
Lena Boëthius, Björn Fredlund, Marit Ingeborg Lange, Axel L Romdahl, Edvard Munch, red. Björn Fredlund, Göteborgs konstmuseum, 2002., no. 18, p. 68, ill. p. omslag, 69 François Albera, Magne Bruteig, Clément Chéroux et al., Edvard Munch. The Modern Eye, red. Angela Lampe och Clément Chéroux, Tate (Centre Pompidou), London (Paris) 2012., p. 32-35, 52 Kynaston McShine, Reinhold Heller, Patricia G. Berman et al., Edvrad Munch. The Modern Life of the Soul, red. Kynaston McShine, The Museum of Modern Art, New York 2006., p. 202-203, ill. p. 93 Frank Høifødt, Jay A. Clarke, Øivind Storm Bjerke et al., Edvard Munch. An Anthology, red. Erik Mørstad, Unipub forlag, Oslo Academic Press, Oslo 2006., p. 43-86, ill. p. 56 Kristoffer Arvidsson, Per Dahlström, Björn Fredlund, Anna Hyltze, Philippa Nanfeldt, Isabella Nilsson, Johan Sjöström, Samlingen Göteborgs konstmuseum, red. Kristoffer Arvidsson, Per Dahlström, Anna Hyltze, Göteborgs konstmuseum, Göteborg 2014., p. 242, 247, ill. p. 244-245 Axel Romdahl, "Edvard Munch i Konstmuseet", Göteborgs Museum Årstryck 1944, Göteborg 1944., p. 91 Edvard Munch. Between the Clock and the Bed, red. Gary Garrels, Jon-Ove Steihaug, Sheena Wagstaff, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2017., no. 20, p. 37, ill. p. 95 Mille Stein, Göteborgs konstmuseum. Registrering av fire Munchmalerier med hensyn på opprinnelig tilstand, 2018.
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