Forwarded from Deleted Account
>take lorazepam
>forget about it
>oh i should take lorazepam.. also i should take 2 bc that's more fun
>wake up
>ten pills are gone
>forget about it
>oh i should take lorazepam.. also i should take 2 bc that's more fun
>wake up
>ten pills are gone
Edvard Munch - Melancholy (1894)
The man in this painting is Jappe Nilssen, a close friend of Munch. Nilssen had a romantic affair with a married woman who finally decided to stay with her husband, causing a deep sadness in the painter's friend. In this work, a thoughtful Nilssen sits by the shore, looking at the horizon, while in the background we can appreciate the shapes of a woman and a man about to get on a wooden boat, representing the lost love of Munch's friend. The misty colors and elongated contours convey the sadness and impotence the character feels after this love deception.
The man in this painting is Jappe Nilssen, a close friend of Munch. Nilssen had a romantic affair with a married woman who finally decided to stay with her husband, causing a deep sadness in the painter's friend. In this work, a thoughtful Nilssen sits by the shore, looking at the horizon, while in the background we can appreciate the shapes of a woman and a man about to get on a wooden boat, representing the lost love of Munch's friend. The misty colors and elongated contours convey the sadness and impotence the character feels after this love deception.