MUNCH
MUNCH houses the world's largest collection of Edvard Munch's art in a striking 13-story tower that opened in 2021.
About MUNCH
MUNCH houses the world's largest collection of Edvard Munch's art in a striking 13-story tower that opened in 2021. You'll see multiple versions of The Scream, The Dance of Life, and hundreds of lesser-known paintings, prints, and sketches that reveal Munch's full artistic evolution beyond his famous anxious faces. The collection rotates regularly, so you're seeing maybe 400 pieces out of 28,000 total works, plus the top floor offers genuine panoramic views over Oslo's fjord and mountains.
The experience flows chronologically upward through Munch's life, starting with his early realistic works and progressing to the psychological intensity he's known for. The building itself feels almost clinical, with white walls and dramatic lighting that makes the art pop but can feel sterile. You'll spend most time on floors 6-9 where the paintings hang, though the sketches and prints on lower floors show his technical skill. The elevator ride to floor 13 reveals the city spreading below through floor-to-ceiling windows.
Admission costs 180 NOK for adults, which is steep but reasonable given what you see. Most guides won't mention that the temporary exhibitions (usually floor 10-11) are often more interesting than the permanent collection rehashing the same famous pieces. Skip the audio guide at 50 NOK, the wall texts are perfectly adequate, and don't feel obligated to see every floor if Munch fatigue sets in around hour two.
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