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Munch: Love and Angst

Speech given by Her Majesty The Queen at the opening of the exhibition "Munch: Love and Angst" at the British Museum, London, 9 April, 2019.

Excellencies
Ladies and gentlemen
Friends of the arts

In Norway, we have grown up with Edvard Munch. Scream and Madonna, The Dance of Life and The Sun are natural parts of our lives. Munch said himself: “I will paint living people who breathe and feel and suffer and love.”

And he did. I think most of us can recognize our own lives in his art. Munch is universal, because he shows us who we can be – on the large canvas between love and angst.

Munch wasn’t merely a genius painter – he was also a bold and innovative printmaker. I am very pleased to see British Museum showing Munch’s graphic works in such a grand manner.

The largest ever loan of Edvard Munch’s prints to an institution would not have been possible without the excellent cooperation between British Museum and the Munch Museum. The cultural relations between our two countries have always been very strong. We are encouraged to see an increased awareness about Norwegian artists and Norwegian art history in the United Kingdom.

The Queen Sonja Print Award has also benefited from the cooperation between British Museum and the Munch Museum. Tomorrow young printmaking artists and their lecturers are invited to a seminar on graphic art.  Last year’s recipient of Queen Sonja Print Award’s grandest prize, Emma Nishimura, will give a talk on her very special and interesting art. In addition the curators of this exhibition — Giulia Bartum and Ute Kuhlemann Falck, will introduce us further to Munch’s prints

As this exhibition shows, the world of printmaking may be a room for artistic experimentation and testing – it is, indeed intriguing and many-faceted.

I am delighted and proud to declare the exhibition “Munch: Love and Angst” open!

 

09.04.2019

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