Discover the experimental methods of Edvard Munch, who creatively
explored materials and techniques across media. A dynamic
collaboration between curatorial and conservation experts at the
Harvard Art Museums, Edvard Munch: Technically Speaking offers rare
insight into the Norwegian artist’s innovative techniques and the
recurring themes across his paintings, woodcuts, lithographs,
etchings, and combination prints. The Harvard Art Museums house one of
the largest and most significant collections of artwork by Munch in
the United States, and the exhibition showcases roughly 70 works,
including key loans from Munchmuseet, Oslo. Visitors are invited to
explore Munch’s artistic process, uncovering his playful approach
and fascination with materiality. He returned to some themes
repeatedly during his lifetime, carrying motifs across printmaking and
painting and demonstrating how a single idea can evoke different
responses through shifts in color and orientation. In the exhibition,
prints are displayed alongside the original copper plates, woodblocks,
and lithography stones used to create them, providing further access
into Munch’s experimental practice. Edvard Munch: Technically
Speaking also features groundbreaking research that sheds new light
on the artist’s techniques and processes. Curated by Elizabeth M.
Rudy, Carl A. Weyerhaeuser Curator of Prints, and Lynette Roth,
Daimler Curator of the Busch-Reisinger Museum; with Peter Murphy,
Stefan Engelhorn Curatorial Fellow in the Busch-Reisinger Museum.
Research in collaboration with Ellen Davis, Associate Paintings
Conservator, Penley Knipe, Philip and Lynn Straus Senior Conservator
of Works on Paper and Head of the Paper Lab, Abby Schleicher,
Assistant Paper Conservator, and Kate Smith, Senior Conservator of
Paintings and Head of the Paintings Lab, all in the Straus Center for
Conservation and Technical Studies; and with contributions from Cambra
Sklarz, Diane and Michael Maher Curatorial Fellow of American Art, and
Kacper Kolęda and Tai Mitsuji, Ph.D. candidates in the Department of
History of Art and Architecture at Harvard University. Save
culture
43
Views
10/07/2025 Last update