The painter Edvard Munch was tormented man, who had a very gloomy childhood. "His private life as a grown up was a mess, but he managed to express all his anguish through his creative and disquieting paintings" (Belmont 1). As we take a look at his personal life and how things went for him, you will discover many things that will surprise you.
It all started when Edvard Munch was born on December 12, 1863 in Loten, Norway. He grew up with a dad who was a military doctor. His mother had passed away when he was five years old due to tuberculosis. A few years after that in 1877, his sister, Sophie, died of the same disease along with a brother of his. His only brother actually got married later on, but died shortly after. His only sister left, Karen, took over the household (Edvard 1). These were obviously some pretty depressing things that happened to him. He was stunned at what had happened. Especially at the young age that he was at, he did not know what to make out of it. These deaths could explain his thinking during the time of his paintings.
After growing up he entered a technical college to become an engineer. Since his family members had gotten sick and died, the illnesses were passed on to him. He was a very sickly man during his lifetime. He dropped college to become a painter because his illnesses were interrupting his schooling. In 1881, Munch enrolled into the Royal School of Art and
Design (Edvard 1). It was there that he painted his first self portrait. In 1885, he worked on one of his paintings that would soon become very popular. It was called "The Sick Child".
After exhibiting his work at the Industries and Art Exhibition, Munch decided to go study in Paris at the Bonnat School of Art in 1889. The same year his father passed away, yet another death in Edvard's life. He went back to Norway because of his father's death, and then returned to Paris for the rest of his schooling (Edvard 1). After all of the deaths within his family, Munch began to abuse alcohol. It took a toll on his body by deteriorating his health.
Following his schooling, Edvard moved to Berlin. He was invited to an exhibit and became the bitter controversy. After about one week the exhibit was closed.
Then Geisel left home at age 18 to attend Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. When he was there he was editor in chief for the college’s humor magazine named Jack-O-Lantern. One night when he was in his dorm he and some of his friends were caught drinking in their dorm room in violation of the Prohibition law. For that he was kicked off the magazine staff but he continued to write for it under the name “Seuss”.
After graduation, Seuss went to Oxford to pursue a doctorate in English. There he met his first wife Helen Palmer, who encouraged him to draw because he obviously enjoyed that more than he liked English. After Seuss and Helen were married, they moved to New York where he got job...
When he was fifteen years old, his mother died from appendicitis. From fifteen years of age to his college years, he lived in an all-white neighborhood. From 1914-1917, he shifted from many colleges and academic courses of study as well as he changed his cultural identity growing up. He studied physical education, agriculture, and literature at a total of six colleges and universities from Wisconsin to New York. Although he never completed a degree, his educational pursuits laid the foundation for his writing career.
Georges Seurat was a French born artist born on December 2nd 1859 in Paris, Frrance. He study at École des Beaux-Art, which was one of the most prestige art schools in the world, which is also known for training many of the renounced artist we know. George Seurat left the École des Beaux-Art and began to work on his own; he began to visit impressionist exhibitions, where he gained inspiration from the impressionist painters, such as Claude Monet. Seurat also was interested in the science of art; he explored perception, color theory and the psychological effect of line and form. Seurat experimented with all the ideas he had gained, he felt the need to go beyond the impressionist style, he started to focus on the permanence of paintin...
In 1792 he suffered from a serious illness which left him permanently deaf. This began to make him feel alienated and separated from everyone else, provoking him to paint the darkness and weakness of mankind. He began to paint his own version of caricatures, showing the subjects as he saw them.
At the age of 21, his intestinal operation led to appendicitis. Henri was on bed rest for most of 1890 and to help him occupy his time, his mother bought him a set of paints. That was the turning point in Henri’s life. He decided to give up his career in law for a career in art. Matisse himself said, “It was as if I had been called. Henceforth I did not lead my life. It led me” (Getlein 80). Soon after, Henri began to take classes at the Academie Julian to prepare himself for the entrance examination at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts (Essers 7). Henri failed his first attempt, leading to his departure from the Academie. He then enrolled at the Ecole des Arts decoratifs and that is where his friendship with Albert Marquet began. They started working alongside of Gustave Moreau, a distinguished teacher at Ecole des Beaux-Arts, even though they had not been accepted (Essers 12). In 1895, Henri finally passed the Beaux-Arts entrance examination and his pathway to his new career choice had officially begun.
Born in Boston, Massachusetts on January 19, 1809, Edgar Allan Poe faced many hardships in his life beginning at nine months old, when his alcoholic father abandoned his mother and other two siblings. Once Poe had lost his wife Virginia to illnesses, his poems were noticeably growing darker and more gruesome, and her death “haunted Poe until the end of his life” (Erica). These are only a few hardships Poe faced throughout his life, and each one led him to become a more dramatic and disturbing person. Every suffering he faced was used as a prompt for his writings, and throughout his work he places his hurt and depression into each piece based off his own life. His famous poems are the results of his insanity based off his unfortunate life. Even though Poe lived a challenging and stressful life, his poems ...
In an attempt to fulfill his dreams of bring an artist, he moved to Vienna. He wanted to go to the Academy of Fine Arts, but was surprised when he wasn't accepted. About a year later, he found himself living in homeless shelters and eating at soup kitchens. Despite this, he refused to take a regular job; instead he would sell a painting or poster for money. Then he moved back to Munich, Germany around the start of World War I. Hitler then volunteered for service in the German army. He was often labeled as brave by fellow soldiers, but only reached the rank corporal. When World War I was coming to an end, Hitler was put in the hospital for temporary blindness, most likely caused by a poison gas attack.
...reme pleasure: that of being Salvador Dali.” Many people assumed that he had some drugs in order for him to come up his images but Dali was known to deprive himself of food and sleep for days to create those hallucinations he turned into art. His artwork and his life gave everyone something to talk about and he did not care what others thought and was scared to speak his mind. Dali does seem like a crazy man, whether he tries to be or he was just naturally eccentric.
He was a poor man, he did not have a stable job and he was also an alcoholic. He drank a whole lot just to try to escape from the demon from his depressed and saddened own world, he expresses his feelings through all the short stories and poems he wrote. His perspective and his own diffe...
Salvador Dali, “Paranoiac Interpretation: The Tragic Myth of Millet’s Angelus” Salvador Dali’s Art and Writing, 1927-1942: The Metamorphoses of Narcissus trans. Haim Finkelstein (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 211-217.
aspects of his life heavily influenced his inspiring works, including his family life, his obsession with spiritualism, his upbringing and early career in Edinburg, and his distorted perspective of society
In 1892 Munch submitted a series of paintings into a major Berlin art show. His exhibit was titled “The Frieze of Life. This show caused an even larger uproar than his previous work. Edvard became a celebrity overnight and he painted such paintings as “the sick child” “the scream” and “vampire”, which showed. his true emotions and feelings.
Edgar Allan Poe’s unique, fearless and morbid writing style has influenced literature throughout the world. He was once titled the "master of the macabre" (Buranelli, 57). One of the aspects in his life with which he struggled was social isolation. He used this as a topic in a number of poems and short stories. Poe's life was also filled with periods of fear and irrationality. He had a very sensitive side when it came to the female gender, any woman he was ever close to died at an early age. Another of his major battles, actually the only one he really lost, was his struggle with alcoholism. Of all these topics, Poe's favorites were the death of a beautiful woman, a feeling, which he knew all too well, and the general topic of death. Edgar Allan Poe endured a very difficult life and this is evident in his literary style.
I once knew a madman who thought the end of the world had come. He was a painter—and engraver. I had a great fondness for him. I used to go and see him, in the asylum. I'd ...