MUNCH, Edvard
(b. 1863, Løten, d. 1944, Oslo)

Summer Night's Dream (The Voice)

1893
Oil on canvas,88 x 108 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Munch was strongly influenced by the work of Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin, in particular their use of colour and form to evocative, expressive ends. In the late 1880s, Munch conceived an epic series of paintings entitled "The Frieze of Life," which dealt poetically and symbolically with life, love, and death. Many of his most memorable images were part of this ultimately unfinished project.

"Summer Night's Dream," the first work in the cycle of Love, portrays the initial glimmer of adolescent sexual awakening. Bathed in an eerie light, the painting is probably set in the Borre Forest, a traditional place of courtship during Norway's long midsummer nights.