
Winter Forest
Edvard Munch·1900
Historical Context
Winter Forest from 1900 was painted during Munch's Norwegian winter, depicting the forest in the specific conditions of the Scandinavian winter — the dense spruce and birch stands under snow or bare against the winter sky, in the limited light of the short December or January days. The winter forest was a subject with strong precedents in Norwegian Romantic landscape painting, from Johan Christian Dahl's wintry Norwegian scenes through the Naturalist landscape painters of the 1880s. Munch inflects this tradition with his characteristic psychological attention, treating the forest not as a picturesque natural spectacle but as a space with its own atmosphere of enclosure, silence, and latent menace. The Hamburger Kunsthalle holds this as part of its significant Norwegian and German modernist collection.
Technical Analysis
Munch renders the winter forest in a palette restricted to dark greens, greys, brown-blacks of bare branches, and the white of snow in cleared areas or between trees, creating a composition dominated by vertical rhythms of tree trunks and the horizontal interruptions of the forest floor and sky glimpsed above. The handling is confident and direct.
Look Closer
- ◆The winter forest's trees create dense vertical marks against the pale sky.
- ◆Snow on the ground and branches is rendered in the cool blue-white that Scandinavian winter.
- ◆A path through the forest is visible — a route into the dark interior rather than away from it.
- ◆The directional, energetic marks show Munch absorbing Van Gogh's influence on a distinctly.




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