:51:04
about my paintings.
:51:10
She began to talk about how
he had not greeted her on the street,
:51:15
that she was just as good
as other ladies.
:51:19
Look at Mrs. Pettersen
who went with the lieutenant to Paris.
:51:23
It made him shudder to hear
the affection with which she spoke.
:51:35
At first, Munch adds
:51:36
domestic details to the periphery
of the painting,
:51:40
such as a chair, a glass, a bottle,
:51:42
a flowerpot on a window
and curtains.
:51:45
Then, slowly, over the months,
:51:49
he begins to remove these details,
:51:52
concentrating more and more
on the head of his sister.
:51:56
Munch's affair with Mrs. Heiberg
is already deteriorating.
:52:01
He takes the hand of his sister
and paints it
:52:04
in broad and vague strokes,
:52:07
blurring out its ability
for human contact.
:52:11
Her hand was large and coarse.
She placed her cheek against his.
:52:19
He turned his head away
:52:21
so that their mouths didn't meet.
:52:22
She was too repulsive.
:52:30
I am so glad you came.
:52:34
I saw you out walking
with another man yesterday.
:52:38
- Just a friend.
- A friend!
:52:42
I'd been waiting half an hour
and you walked straight past.
:52:47
I was with Lieutenant Lund.
:52:51
He's just a friend.
:52:56
Don't shout.
:52:57
Everybody can hear.
:52:59
Damn it, I have hundreds of things
to think of! It can't go on like this!