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Puberty (Munch)

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Puberty
Norwegian: Pubertet
ArtistEdvard Munch
Year1894–95
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions151.5 cm × 110 cm (59+58 in × 43+38 in)
LocationNational Gallery, Oslo

Puberty (Norwegian: Pubertet) is an 1894–95 painting created by Norwegian artist Edvard Munch. Puberty has associations with both symbolism and expressionism, the former a movement from which Munch emerged, and the latter a movement in which Munch was pivotal. It is part of an informal series or cycle of paintings, prints, and images known as The Frieze of Life, that Munch created in the 1890s, although he often revisited and explored themes and images from the series throughout his career. The painting was also done as a lithograph and an etching by Munch.

Genesis

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Félicien Rops, Le Plus Bel Amour De Don Juan [Don Juan's Greatest Love], etching, 1882.

Whenever he was questioned on the subject, Munch maintained he had not been influenced by the work of the Belgium artist and illustrator Félicien Rops,[1]: 195 p.  specifically the etching Le Plus Bel Amour De Don Juan [Don Juan's Greatest Love], published as an illustration in the second edition of Jules Amédée Barbey d’Aurevilly's book Les Diaboliques in 1882 (based on an earlier 1879 pencil drawing).[2]: 5 p. ) However, art critics and historians have consistently noted the similarities; beginning with Przybyszewski (1894) the first publication ever devoted to Munch.[3]: 35 p.  Munch claimed the ca. 1894-95 painting was a copy of an earlier painting he first made in 1885 or 1886[3]: 78 p.  and "that this earlier version had been lost in a studio fire".[1]: 195 p.  In the late 1880s and into the mid-1890s, Munch, in his mid-twenties, had begun to create his series of Puberty pieces. At this time Munch had already established himself as a notable artist in Berlin. During this period of his life Munch often found residence in Berlin, where his newfound fame and circle of friends were. His new group of friends are attributed for helping push Munch further into his sexually depressed state of mind.[4] Munch allowed this sexual depression to seep into Puberty and like other works he created later this piece was created with symbolism reflecting feelings which continued growing increasingly within the next ten years.[5] This state of sexual depression is one that not only his circle of friends shared with him, but that the psychological scholars had also been curious about having just written the first research on the stages and occurrences of puberty in young adults.[6]

Subject matter

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Munch's painting Puberty depicts a young naked girl sitting on the edge of a bed. Her legs are pressed together. She holds her hands in front of her body; one lies between her knees, while the other rests on her right thigh. She stares straight ahead with eyes wide open. Her mouth is closed and her long hair hangs down over the shoulders. The light enters from the left, and behind her a dark, ominous shadow is visible. The motif is often regarded as a symbol of anxiety and fear, a young girl's awakening sexuality and the changes a young person experiences physically and psychologically on the path towards adulthood.[7]

Munch gave a number of titles to various versions of the motif, originally The Young Model, later Puberty, and still later At Night. "The image can thus sustain various interpretations, from a view of a model by an artist to an evocation of nocturnal sensual pleasures and terrors."[1]: 197 p. 

Others' comments

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Edvard Munch, At Night (Puberty), 1902
  • Arne Eggum has stated in commentary published by The Masterworks of Edvard Munch regarding Munch's Puberty that the images were so similar, Munch found it necessary to claim he did not wish to replicate Félicien Rops' 1886 Le Plus Bel Amour De Don Juan.[8] [Although Eggum was in error; the 2nd ed. of Les Diaboliques with Rops etching, was published in 1882, not 1886].[9]
  • Munch claimed the painting is a duplicate of one that had been earlier destroyed in a fire in 1885 or 1886, reiterating the confusion of the original idea in which Munch was inspired to create Puberty.[10][1]: 195 p. [3]: 79 p. 
  • Munch himself (like the female he has portrayed in Puberty) feared sex due to the loss of his virginity to his cousin's wife.[11]

Artistic growth

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Puberty was a spark towards the progress of his personal emotional journey in how he portrayed his feelings in his artwork.[12]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d Prelinger, Elizabeth and Michael Parke-Taylor (1996). The Symbolist Prints of Edvard Munch. Yale University Press, New Haven. 236 pp. ISBN 0-300-06952-9
  2. ^ Bade, Patrick (2003) Félicien Rops. Parkstone Press Ltd, New York, 95 pp. ISBN 1-85995-890-7
  3. ^ a b c Messer, Thomas M. (1970). Munch: The Library of Great Painters. Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers, New York. 166 pp.
  4. ^ "The life of Edvard Munch". Archived from the original on 2009-02-18. Retrieved 2009-04-21.
  5. ^ Deknatel, 1950, p. 15
  6. ^ Cordulack, 2002 p. 116
  7. ^ "Munch Museum". Archived from the original on 2014-04-02. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  8. ^ Eggum, p. 42
  9. ^ Jules Amédée Barbey D'Aurevilly (1882). Les Diaboliques. Lemerre, Paris. OCLC 313417503. Retrieved January 23, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  10. ^ "Puberty". Archived from the original on 2017-01-25. Retrieved 2009-04-21.
  11. ^ "Edvard Munch Biography". Retrieved April 21, 2009.
  12. ^ Deknatel, 1950 p. 15

References

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