MUNCH is the museum dedicated to Norwegian artist Edward Munch. Housed in a controversial, grey, 13-story tower known locally as "Lambda," it sits right on the Bjørvika waterfront. While the exterior has divided local opinion (some say it looks like an airport control tower), the interior is a world-class journey through Edvard Munch’s life.
Unlike traditional galleries where you walk endlessly through flat halls, here you travel up. The museum is designed to be explored floor by floor via escalators, offering glimpses of the Oslofjord as you ascend. The collection includes over 26,000 works, but the layout is surprisingly intimate, breaking Munch’s heavy themes of love, death, and anxiety into digestible chapters.
The Catch: The museum holds three versions of The Scream (a painting, a drawing, and a print). Because they are fragile, they are displayed in a rotation system. Only one is revealed at a time for about an hour. If you want to be guaranteed to see the most famous version of the painting, the 1893 painted version with the "swirly" sky, go to the National Museum.
Practical Info:
- Bags: Large bags are strictly forbidden. Use the free lockers in the basement (they use a digital QR code system).
- Security: Expect airport-style security scanners at the entrance.