MM N 415. Ibsen and the Frieze of Life!, Towards the light –
Literary sketches. Ibsen and the Frieze of Life!, Towards the light –
Literary sketches. Ibsen and the Frieze of Life!, Towards the light –
– I had with me a greeting from Dr. Elias
and other friends of his in Berlin
– It was during the Freie Bühne period and
– when the Ibsen cult was just beginning –
– I went up to
his residence in Arbiensgade – with a
[visiting] card in my pocket – I was aware of Ibsen’s
secluded lifestyle and was in Fact
happy that he was not at home
I left my card and
believed that that was the end of it –
– One day on Karl Johan – a little bit after
Dinnertime –
I was walking down Karl Johan
which was teeming with people –
– when I decided to go in to
the reading room at the Grand [Hotel] – They had for-
eign – and German newspapers – There in the Corner
by the window facing Karl Johan half
concealed in shadow sat Ibsen behind his
newspaper – every now and then
he peered about the room with
large blinking eyes behind his glasses –
– He would spend time here every day
in the early afternoons reading the papers
and having his daily highball – Here he could maintain
a modicum of communication with the Europe
he had left behind –
– I read a couple of German
newspapers – and then went out into the teeming
crowd – I walked towards the Café
– I turned around just as I was about to
enter – And there was Ibsen
in the street as well – he had
also left – I entered the
Café – some friends were sitting
at a table among them Sigurd Høst
I sat down
– There is Ibsen someone said –
– and we could see his short yet
ample figure there
in the doorway – entering the Grand –
It was a singular sight –
– There he came sailing like a broad
ship amidst the sitting guests
– and he was headed towards us –
– Good Afternoon Mr. Munch I presume
– I would like to thank you for your visit – and there
he was –
He asked about his friends –
– we could barely talk
for the emotion –
– Then he left – he had
returned my visit –
Ibsen [by] the window – the portrait –
– Lugné-Poë – Nathansen and his wife
Herman Bang – Ibsen holding
me by the shirtsleeve – He was in the
right state of mind – there was a little devil in
his eyes – I am working on something new
he said – And there will be some devilry
in it as well. One cannot do without it –
Oh, well – it will probably not be understood
– They still do not understand “Per Gynt ” –
– By this I mean – the entire nation
It was in 1895 –
I had an exhibition at Blomqvist
in the autumn – There was a heated
controversy about the pictures – There were calls
to boycott the venue – the police [were summoned] –
– One day I met Ibsen
down there – He walked over to
me – I find it extremely interesting
he said – Believe me – you will have the
same fate as I – the more enemies
[you make] the more friends [you will acquire] –
I had to walk beside him
and he insisted on seeing every picture A great part
of The Frieze of Life was displayed –
The melancholic young man
by the shore – Madonna – Scream
– Angst – Jealously – The three women – (or
Woman in Three Stages)
He was particularly interested in –
Woman in Three Stages – I had to explain it to
him – They are the idealistic woman –
– woman with a lust for life – and
woman as a Nun – the pale
one standing behind the trees –
– Then he was amused by
my portraits – how I
had emphasised a certain characteristic
– so that it bordered on caricature –
– some years later Ibsen wrote
When We Dead Awaken –
– The sculptor’s work that
is never executed – but disappeared
abroad – I recognised
several motifs that resembled
my pictures in The Frieze of Life –
– The man sitting slumped over
amidst the boulders – in Melancholy
Jealousy – The Polish man who lay prostrate
with a bullet in his head –
But the three women in particular –
– Irene – the one in white who
dreams of stepping out into life –
– Maja the one with a lust for life –
the naked one
– The grieving woman – with her petrified
pale head in between the tree trunks –
– Irene’s fate –
the nurse –
– These three women appear
many times in Ibsen ’s
drama– as in my picture –
– A bright summer night the
grieving woman dressed in black was
juxtaposed to the light naked figure
in a kind of bathing costume –
– The alluring white form
against grief’s dark colours – all
in the mystical light of an illuminated
summer night – as in my picture
The illuminated summer night when life and
death, day and night walk hand in hand
In Ibsen ’s drama – the sculptor’s
portraits are also mentioned – they
were caricatures – animal heads
which the commissioners of the portraits received as a bonus
– As in Ibsen ’s ‘The Dead Awaken ’
– where the sculptor’s work depicting
the resurrection – was split up – and
uncompleted – that is how it ended with
my work as well –
– some of my pictures ended up in
Bergen – some in Munich
– I was not granted
any [financial] support – to complete the work
– at the time – I was most preoccupied
with it – It was crushed by
derision and adversity –
– It was not until much later that I
barely collected – what was left of it which also
resulted in approximately [that same state] as I
had organised it 20 years ago –
– It had merely become a draft
a torso
It was intended to be on a far greater scale
– and more expanded and developed –
I had also thought of [making]
stained glass windows to go with it –
– The other was Towards the Light
– the human being’s yearning for
the light – a human mass
that rises up high like a column
or a mountain – reaching towards the sun –
The remaining pictures – depict
humans struggling – –
The two largest pictures are the struggle
and the rainbow
Moreover it was nearly the same …
in the two proposals – I worked on the series
Towards the Light – with The Human Mountain
and human struggle and yearning – out at Ekely
It was during the time of
Realism and Impressionism –
I was in an agitated sickly
state of mind – or in a joyful
mood – and found a
landscape – I wanted to
paint – I brought my easel
set it up and painted the picture
from nature –
It was a good picture –
but not the one I wished to paint –
– I did not capture what I saw in
the agitated sickly mood or
– in the joyful mood –
– This occurred often –
then I began to scrape
away at the picture – to search in my
memory – for the first impression
– seeking to retrieve it
When I saw the sick child The red
Hair – against the pale face the head against the white
cushion – it made an impression
that disappeared as I worked on it –
– The Picture was painted over
many times – in the course of a
year I scraped away at it countless
times – I wanted to regain
the first impression – I achieved
much of the first impression in
the mode of expression but – after a while
I became worn out so the colours became
grey –. This was the first
‘sick child’ – which is now owned by
Barrister Nørregård – It was only many
years later that I took the picture up again – and
painted 3 new pictures of the sick girl – Here one succeeded in
rendering the first impression – the colour –
the red hair stands starkly out against
the white face and the white cushion
Later I began to go
directly to the first impression
and often painted only from
memory – made a pencil drawing
after which I began to paint –
lay out the picture out of doors – and finished
painting it indoors
I painted the pictures of the Frieze of Life
only after the image – that had imprinted itself on
my eye in a moment of emotion – and
painted what still
remained attached – to my
retina –
– I painted only what
I remembered – and added nothing –
– Hence the Simplicity –
– and often the apparent emptiness
in many pictures –
I painted impressions from childhood
– The faded colours from that time
– I painted the colours and the lines I
had seen in an emotional
state – and I was thus able
to create the quivering emotional
atmosphere once more –
That is how the pictures in The
Frieze of Life came into being –