Edvard Munch (pronounced [ˈmʉŋk], December 12, 1863 – January 23, 1944)[1] was a NorwegianSymbolistpainter, printmaker, and an important forerunner of expressionistic art. His best-known composition, The Scream (1893[2] and 1910) (?)[3] is one of the pieces in a series titled The Frieze of Life, in which Munch explored the themes of life,love,fear, death, and melancholy. As here, he often painted several versions of the motif. Similar paintings include Despair and Anxiety.
Alfonse Mucha, Posters, Paris, France
Hotel Van Eetvelde, Victor Horta1895-98, Belgium, Art Nouveau
Central Atrium, Hotel Van Eetvelde, Victor Horta, Belgium, Art Nouveau
Horta’s own Home and Studio, Victor Horta,1898-1901,Belgium, Art Nouveau
Stairwell, Horta’s own Home and Studio, Victor Horta, Belgium, Art Nouveau
Built-in Sideboard, Horta’s own Home, Victor Horta, Belgium, Art Nouveau
H. van de Velde: Office for Julius Meier-Graefe, c. 1900
Castel Beranger, Hector Guimard, 1895-98, France, Art Nouveau
Hector Guimard’s Studio, Castel Beranger, France, Art Nouveau
Cabinet, Hector Guimard, France, Art Nouveau
Eugène Gaillard
Emile Gallé, Glass Lamp, French, Art Nouveau
Hanging Cabinet, Emile Gallé, French, Art Nouveau
Casa Batlló, Antonio Gaudí, 1904-1906, Barcelona, Spain, Modernism
Interior, Casa Batlló, Antonio Gaudí, Barcelona, Spain, Modernisme
Wisteria Table Lamp, Louis Comfort Tiffany, America, Art Nouveau
Details, Sitting Room, Hill House, C. R. Mackintosh, Margaret MacDonald Mackintosh, Scotland, Glasgow School
The Rose Boudoir, International Exhibition, Turin 1902, C. R. Mackintosh, M. MacDonald Mackintosh, Glasgow School
Ingram Street Tea Rooms, Charles Rennie, and Margaret Mackintosh, Scotland, Glasgow School
Chair from Argyle Street Tea Rooms,Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Scotland, Glasgow School
Cashier’s Chair,Willow Tea Rooms, Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Scotland, Glasgow School