Einstürzende Neubauten at Slurpen for “Tidskonsept II”, Oslo 1983.
Artist collective Lambretta invited Einstürzende Neubauten and Holy Toy to perform in their studio that they converted into a gallery space for the evening.
The locale was decorated with painted tv-screens, painted tarps, sheet metal and hanging oil drums, and playing documentary and propaganda clips from wartime Germany and the Soviet Union.
The performance was attended by the art elite, punks, and a tv-crew from the Norwegian national broadcasting network NRK.
The night ended with band members from Einstürzende Neubauten throwing Molotov-cocktails into the crowd, and the crowd reacting similarly by setting fire to the instruments and set design by Lambretta.
Videoclip taken from the NRK archives, Pan, episode “Musikk blir bilde”.
Love, jealousy and breakups in the paintings of Edvard Munch
For most of his life, Munch worked on a large cycle “about love, life and death,” which he called “Frieze of Life.” Many paintings from this cycle depict the same woman with bright red hair. This woman's name was Milli Thaulov, she was Edvard Munch's first lover. The artist had a short but complex relationship with her, the tragic development of which the artist depicted in his works.