Edvard Munch
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1:21:00
it is a re-working
of The Sick Child,

1:21:03
But gone now is
the loose expressive brushstroke

1:21:06
of the earlier work.
1:21:09
Here there is minute detail,
1:21:11
a strain of hair,
1:21:13
a blood stained handkerchief,
1:21:16
a carefully outlined bottle and vase,
1:21:19
the detailed top of a cupboard,
1:21:21
and even the pot of flowers.
1:21:24
Have you seen Miss C.
since she married?

1:21:28
I expect things are difficult for you.
1:21:32
It must feel strange
when you think of her.

1:21:36
Why has Munch's work changed
so much since The Sick Child?

1:21:43
I can only guess but something
must have happened to Munch

1:21:48
which made him lose faith
in himself and his art,

1:21:52
poor criticism as well as
other factors.

1:22:05
Society accepts the fact
that a man has a mistress

1:22:15
but, if a woman has a lover,
it's quite a different matter.

1:22:18
Have you thought about that?
1:22:20
Later perhaps.
1:22:23
Perhaps we can meet then.
1:22:30
Everything could be different.
1:22:35
We mustn't take it so casually.
1:22:38
If I marry, I must live
for my husband.

1:22:43
A woman often marries
because she needs to be supported.

1:22:49
She can't earn what she needs to live.

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