
Edvard Munch Madonna
First exhibited in 1894, Munch's Madonna is one of the defining images of Symbolism — a figure suspended between ecstasy and grief, life and death, desire and transcendence. The flowing dark hair and closed eyes read as both surrender and self-containment, while the undulating contours of the composition give the whole image a pulse-like rhythm. The border motif of spermatozoa and a foetal figure in earlier print versions frames the subject in an unbroken cycle of existence that remains unsettling in its directness.
Printed as a canvas print in Kuriosis's Berlin studio, the textured cotton surface amplifies the painting's swirling depth and warmth, with museum-grade archival inks preserving every subtle tonal gradation with gallery fidelity.
First exhibited in 1894, Munch's Madonna is one of the defining images of Symbolism — a figure suspended between ecstasy and grief, life and death, desire and transcendence. The flowing dark hair and closed eyes read as both surrender and self-containment, while the undulating contours of the composition give the whole image a pulse-like rhythm. The border motif of spermatozoa and a foetal figure in earlier print versions frames the subject in an unbroken cycle of existence that remains unsettling in its directness.
Printed as a canvas print in Kuriosis's Berlin studio, the textured cotton surface amplifies the painting's swirling depth and warmth, with museum-grade archival inks preserving every subtle tonal gradation with gallery fidelity.
Original: $38.84
-65%$38.84
$13.59Description
First exhibited in 1894, Munch's Madonna is one of the defining images of Symbolism — a figure suspended between ecstasy and grief, life and death, desire and transcendence. The flowing dark hair and closed eyes read as both surrender and self-containment, while the undulating contours of the composition give the whole image a pulse-like rhythm. The border motif of spermatozoa and a foetal figure in earlier print versions frames the subject in an unbroken cycle of existence that remains unsettling in its directness.
Printed as a canvas print in Kuriosis's Berlin studio, the textured cotton surface amplifies the painting's swirling depth and warmth, with museum-grade archival inks preserving every subtle tonal gradation with gallery fidelity.























