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Edvard Munch Authentic Signed & Framed 4x5.5 Letter The Scream Display BAS


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  • Edvard Munch Authentic Signed & Framed 4x5.5 Letter The Scream Display BAS
  • Edvard Munch Authentic Signed & Framed 4x5.5 Letter The Scream Display BAS
  • Edvard Munch Authentic Signed & Framed 4x5.5 Letter The Scream Display BAS
  • Edvard Munch Authentic Signed & Framed 4x5.5 Letter The Scream Display BAS
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Total Saved: $1,958.81
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SKU:BAS-A39033

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SKU:
BAS-A39033

Additional Product Details

Press Pass Collectibles Guarantee,

Additional Product Details

Press Pass Collectibles Guarantee:
Press Pass Collectibles offers only Authentic In-Person Autographs as well as a 100% money back lifetime Certificate of Authenticity with every single autograph we sell. All autographed items come with a Certificate Of Authenticity (COA).

Description

This Autographed & Framed 4x5.5 Letter has been Personally Signed by Edvard Munch. This item is 100% Authentic to include a Certificate of Authenticity (COA) / hologram by Beckett Authentication Services. The authenticity can be verified on Beckett Authentication Services website. This item has been professionally framed to overall dimensions of approximately 26.5 x 28.5 inches. This letter written in French, measuring, 5.5 x 4 inches and dated August 12, 1936. Letter to a friend. In full (translated): "Your letter made me very happy. Thanks a thousand times! I remember our beautiful days and the good friends [we had] in Paris. I heard from Rambosson and Marcel Reja a few years ago. I will write in a few days."Munch first traveled to Paris in the 1880s, where he drew great inspiration from the likes of Paul Gauguin, Vincent van Gogh, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec for how they used color to convey emotion. He spent much of his time between Paris and Berlin from 1892 to 1908, usually summering back home in Norway. During the later part of this period his anxiety and alcoholism grew increasingly worse, and he sought out treatment in Copenhagen, eventually returning to Oslo for good. The first of his Paris acquaintances mentioned in this letter, Yvanhoe Rambosson, was a writer, poet, and art critic who had reviewed Munch's art exhibited at the 1897 Salon des Independants for La Plume, praising it for uniqueness while also commenting on its physical unpleasantness. The other name, "Marcel Reja," was a pseudonym used by psychiatrist Paul Meunier to publish 'Art of Madmen,' the first work to address the art of mental patients from an aesthetic point of view. It was around the time of this letter that Munch's work was declared 'degenerate art' in Nazi Germany, and in 1937 eighty-two of his paintings were confiscated from German museums. Given the subject matter of Munch's paintings and his own emotional instability, this is a particularly intriguing association. An immensely desirable letter tied in with Munch's artistic life in Paris.Press Pass Collectibles only offers Authentic Autographs by Edvard Munch through Signings, In-Person Signings or Private Collections to include a 100% money back Lifetime Authenticity Guarantee.
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