
Edvard Munch The Brooch
A portrait of Eva Mudocci, Norwegian violinist and Munch's close companion, The Brooch is one of the most tender and psychologically complex images the artist produced. The subject's dark hair fans across the composition in cascading waves — a motif Munch returned to repeatedly — while the gaze holds a quality of quiet reserve. The lithographic version is widely considered a masterpiece of the medium, but the painted treatment brings an added warmth and directness, the figure fully present yet somehow unreachable.
Reproduced as a canvas print in Kuriosis's Berlin studio, the textured cotton surface suits the painting's intimate mood, adding depth and warmth, with museum-grade archival inks preserving every delicate halftone.
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Edvard Munch The Brooch
A portrait of Eva Mudocci, Norwegian violinist and Munch's close companion, The Brooch is one of the most tender and psychologically complex images the artist produced. The subject's dark hair fans across the composition in cascading waves — a motif Munch returned to repeatedly — while the gaze holds a quality of quiet reserve. The lithographic version is widely considered a masterpiece of the medium, but the painted treatment brings an added warmth and directness, the figure fully present yet somehow unreachable.
Reproduced as a canvas print in Kuriosis's Berlin studio, the textured cotton surface suits the painting's intimate mood, adding depth and warmth, with museum-grade archival inks preserving every delicate halftone.
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A portrait of Eva Mudocci, Norwegian violinist and Munch's close companion, The Brooch is one of the most tender and psychologically complex images the artist produced. The subject's dark hair fans across the composition in cascading waves — a motif Munch returned to repeatedly — while the gaze holds a quality of quiet reserve. The lithographic version is widely considered a masterpiece of the medium, but the painted treatment brings an added warmth and directness, the figure fully present yet somehow unreachable.
Reproduced as a canvas print in Kuriosis's Berlin studio, the textured cotton surface suits the painting's intimate mood, adding depth and warmth, with museum-grade archival inks preserving every delicate halftone.























