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Munch Museum Windows display gives visitors something to scream about

When art reflects modern realities

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tech4you AI
June 15, 20262 min read
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Munch Museum Windows display gives visitors something to scream about

When art reflects modern realities

BORK!BORK!BORK! "The Scream" by Edvard Munch is an iconic painting, so it somewhat appropriate that a display in a museum dedicated to the artist shows an error likely to elicit the same response from many a Windows user: a Microsoft account recovery screen.

A modern interpretation of The Scream

Spotted by Paul, a Register reader at the Munch Museum in Oslo, the screen shows what appears to be Google Chrome attempting to display a page that requires a Microsoft account to access. For whatever reason – perhaps a password has been forgotten – an account recovery screen is visible rather than information more suited to the museum.

It's enough to elicit a horrified shriek from a user seeking authenticated content. Not unlike the artist's work more than a century earlier.

According to the museum, the motif is "a universal symbol of anxiety," not unlike the trepidation that accompanies modern authentication. The painting likely originated from an evening stroll Munch took, during which he had a strong reaction to a sunset. He attempted to come to terms with it in words and images, which is where the iconic "Scream" motif comes from.

Munch produced several versions of the image, and the museum keeps three in rotation to minimize deterioration. One is always on display, while the others are kept in the dark.

Despite its age, "The Scream" is as striking to modern audiences as it was in Munch's day. Perhaps more so, as humans deal with new technology and react to the latest news about the benefits and/or threats of AI, depending on whom you ask.

In that sense, flashing up an account recovery prompt is perhaps the most appropriate modern interpretation of "The Scream." An expression of horror, anxiety, or despair is one that is all too easy to associate with a user struggling with authentication technology.

Or, in the case of whoever is administering this display, whatever Microsoft service is lurking in the background and needs an account recovered. ®


Originally published on The Register

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