Self -portrait at the Professor Jacobson Hospital - 1909


Size (cm): 65x60
Price:
Sale price€221,95 EUR

Description

The painting "Self -portrait at the Hospital Professor Jacobson" by Edvard Munch, made in 1909, is a work that encapsulates the dilemmas of human fragility through the disturbing lens of the artist himself. Munch, known for his deep focus on the issues of suffering, death and human psychology, uses this self -portrait to communicate his own experience of disease and vulnerability at a time of his life that was marked by personal crisis and a search for physical relief and emotional.

In this work, Munch portrays his central figure introspectively and loaded with emotion. The composition is dominated by a gloomy background that evokes the hospital environment, a space that traditionally symbolizes healing, but that in this context becomes a reflection of isolation and anguish. The color palette is exceptionally melancholic, with dark tones that predominate, accentuating the feeling of gravity. The soft tonalities of the grays mix with pale yellow accents, which illuminate the artist's face, perhaps suggesting a ray of hope or a dim connection with life.

Munch's face appears with marked lines, in an almost ethereal state, which intensifies its vulnerability. His eyes, big and expressive, seem to look for something beyond the viewer's gaze, inviting a reflection on his own psyche and situation. The way in which he has captured his face, in a style that ranges between realistic representation and subjective expression, underlines the theme of suffering that characterizes much of his work.

The environment, although subtle, is inhabited by a sense of desolation that echoes Munch's personal experiences. The use of shadow and light in painting provides a sense of three -dimensionality and emotional depth, suggesting that the artist's experience is not only physical, but also psychological and spiritual. In addition, the fact that he portrays himself in such a vulnerable and personal situation reinforces his interest in the "I" and the exploration of identity, central themes in the expressionist movement of which he was a pioneer.

The "Self -portrait at the Professor Jacobson Hospital" not only presents itself as a testimony of Munch's physical state, but also as a meditation on loneliness and internal struggle that accompanies the disease. Through its characteristic style, which fuses painting with raw emotionality, Munch becomes a narrator of his own existential experience, offering the viewer a window to his pain and reflection.

This painting It reflects the essence of Munch, an artist who explored the complexities of the human condition throughout his life. Comparison in its theme, the "shout" and "the dance of life" are examples of their ability to transmit anguish and the search for meaning in a world often perceived as hostile. Ultimately, "Self -portrait at the Professor Jacobson Hospital" is not only a representation of a moment in the life of Edvard Munch, but a work that transcends his own existence to offer us a universal meditation on suffering, vulnerability and hope.

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