Melancholy
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Melancholy
Summary
Melancholy is a painting series[1]. Melancholy draws 113 Wikipedia views per month (painting_series category, ranking #44 of 214).[2]
Key Facts
- Melancholy is the creator of Edvard Munch[3].
- Melancholy's image is recorded as Edvard Munch - Melancholy - NG.M.02813 - National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design.jpg[4].
- Melancholy's image is recorded as Edvard Munch - Evening. Melancholy (1891).jpg[5].
- Melancholy's image is recorded as Edvard Munch - Melancholy (1893) Munch Museum (MM.M.00033).jpg[6].
- Melancholy's image is recorded as Edvard Munch - Melancholy (1894).jpg[7].
- Melancholy's image is recorded as Edvard Munch - Melancholy (1894-96) KODE.jpg[8].
- Melancholy's instance of is recorded as painting series[9].
- Melancholy's movement is recorded as Expressionism[10].
- Melancholy's movement is recorded as Symbolism[11].
- Melancholy's location is recorded as National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design[12].
- Melancholy's location is recorded as Munch Museum[13].
- Melancholy's location is recorded as KODE Art museums and composer homes[14].
- Melancholy's Commons category is recorded as Melancholy by Edvard Munch[15].
- Melancholy's has part is recorded as Melancholy[16].
- Melancholy's has part is recorded as Evening. Melancholy[17].
- Melancholy's has part is recorded as Melancholy[18].
- Melancholy's has part is recorded as Melancholy[19].
- Melancholy's has part is recorded as Melancholy[20].
- +1891-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Melancholy[21].
- Melancholy's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0rff8dx[22].
- Melancholy's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'no', 'text': 'Melankoli'}[23].
- Melancholy's Great Norwegian Encyclopedia ID is recorded as Melankoli[24].
Body
Works and Contributions
Melancholy is the creator of Edvard Munch[3].
Why It Matters
Melancholy draws 113 Wikipedia views per month (painting_series category, ranking #44 of 214).[2] Melancholy has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] Melancholy is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]