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Squabbles delay new Edvard Munch museum in Oslo

Next year will mark the 150th anniversary of Edvard Munch's birth but still the artworks he bequeathed to Oslo do not have a proper home

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An art critic eyes Edvard Munch's Self-Portrait hanging in the Royal Academy of Arts in London. The artist is acclaimed in the art world but less so in his native Norway where Oslo city politicians have stalled over building a new Munch museum. Photo: AFP

He may be acclaimed in the art world and coveted by thieves, but Edvard Munch is starved of recognition in his native Norway, where squabbles have delayed a new museum worthy of his oeuvre.

Next year will mark the 150th anniversary of the birth of the expressionist master, who painted the now iconic The Scream. But the anniversary is clouded by the city of Oslo's inability to provide a proper setting for the art gems the painter left in his will.

Munch, who died in 1944, bequeathed an enormous collection to the Norwegian capital, including 1,100 paintings, 3,000 drawings and 18,000 etchings.

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But the current Munch Museum, built cheaply after the second world war in a rundown Oslo neighbourhood, does not do justice to the priceless trove.

"It's time to have something more modern that would enable us to better welcome the public and exhibit Munch's work from other perspectives, in broader contexts, both his and ours," museum director Stein Olav Henrichsen said.

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While all agree on the need for a better museum, there are divisions over where to place it.

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