Edvard Munch encountered death at an early age. His mother passed away when he was just six, and his sister followed a few years later. The death of his father in 1889 sent him into a profound crisis. Against this backdrop, it is unsurprising that themes of death, fear, and grief repeatedly surfaced in Munch's work. Reflecting on his traumatic childhood, Munch later wrote: โ€œMy home was the home of illness and death.

I have never gotten over the calamity there. It has also influenced my art.โ€The Child and Death is one of Munchโ€™s most powerful explorations of dying and grief. It depicts a young girl looking outward, her hands covering her ears, while her deceased mother lies in the background.

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True to Munch's style, the focus is not on the deceased but on the emotional state of the livingโ€”in this case, the girl's silent terror. Unlike the figure in The Scream, who expresses anguish with a cry, this child is frozen in fear, unable to vocalize her pain.

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