Norway's National Museum has discovered a new secret about Norwegian painter Edward Munch's "The Scream," one of the most famous artworks in the world. According to the museum, the inscription on the original painting belongs to Munch himself.
Someone wrote in Norwegian, "Can only have been painted by a madman!" in pencil on the top left corner of the famed canvas, which was completed in 1893. "It is easy to imagine an indignant viewer when faced with 'The Scream,' taking a pencil and expressing their opinion on both the artwork and its creator. But that was not the case," the National Museum wrote on its website on Monday.
Instead, new analyses using infrared technology have found that Munch himself wrote the words.
Munch's exhibition of "The Scream" prompted his peers to question his mental health at the time.
"The inscription can be read as an ironic comment but at the same time as an expression of the artist's vulnerability. Writing on the finished painting shows that creating for Munch was a continuous process," said Mai Britt Guleng, curator at the National Museum.
Munch painted four versions of "The Scream." The most well-known versions include the aforementioned original and a later painting from 1910.