Close up of “The Scream” with barely visible graffiti. (Photo: Borre Hostland/The National Museum)
After over a century, the mystery is solved.
Etched into the paint of one of the most famous paintings in the world, a haunting eight-word sentence has been a mystery to art historians for over a century. In 1904, a Danish art critic peering at Edvard Munch‘s The Scream noticed graffiti along the rolling clouds of the blood-red sunset. The sentence reads, “Can only have been painted by a madman.” The mysterious statement—clearly added sometime after the painting’s debut in 1893—was long thought to be added either by a disgruntled onlooker or perhaps the artist himself. The century-old debate has finally been settled by modern technology. Using infrared photography to compare handwriting to Munch’s letters and journals, experts at the National Museum of Norway claim the words are in fact the artist’s own.
Infrared photography used on Edvard Munch’s “The Scream” at the National Museum of Norway. (Photo: Annar Bjorgli/The National Museum)
As part of Norwegian Expressionism, Munch painted several versions of The Scream. The painting with the hidden message is the original, dating to 1893. According to the artist, he got the idea for the haunting image when he experienced a hallucination on a sunset walk. The feeling of pain which radiates from the central figure was quite disconcerting to audiences when the painting was first exhibited. Suggestions were made that the work indicated the artist’s mental state. For this reason, scholars have wondered if an anonymous hand had carved the message calling Munch a “madman.”
The hidden graffiti under infrared light. (Photo: Borre Hostland/The National Museum)
While closed for construction, the National Museum chose to inspect Munch’s painting under infrared light. The images produced give a clearer outline of the words written upon the painting. Experts then compared the handwriting to known examples by the artist. They have come to the conclusion that the hand is one and the same. But why would Munch etch this sentence into his own painting? It is known that Munch took criticism of his mental state very much to heart, as he had a family history of mental illness. According to a statementfrom the museum: “It is likely that Munch added the inscription in 1895, or shortly after in response to the judgment on his work.”[…]
The Scream” by Edvard Munch, held at the National Gallery of Norway. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons [Public domain])
Continue reading: Identity Behind Secret Message Written on ‘The Scream’ Discovered
Kan kun være malet af en gal mand … if he says so himself 😉 … I don’t think he was crazy though, maybe in that moment when he painted the scream. He did paint many other pictures in completely different styles.
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Some say he meant the “scream of nature” not himself. Not at all insane (then)!
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