Emil Nolde (born Hans Emil Hansen; 7 August 1867 – 13 April 1956) was a German-Danish painter and printmaker. He was one of the first Expressionists, a member of Die Brücke, and was one of the first oil painting and watercolor painters of the early 20th century to explore color. He is known for his brushwork and expressive choice of colors. Golden yellows and deep reds appear frequently in his work, giving a luminous quality to otherwise somber tones. His watercolors include vivid, brooding storm-scapes and brilliant florals.
Nolde's intense preoccupation with the subject of flowers reflected his interest in the art of Vincent van Gogh.
Even though his art was included in the Entartete Kunst exhibition of 1937, Nolde was a racist, anti-semite and a staunch supporter of Nazi Germany.[1]
Early life
Emil Nolde was born as Hans Emil Hansen, near the village of Nolde (since 1920 part of the municipality of Burkal in Southern Jutland, Denmark), in the PrussianDuchy of Schleswig. He grew up on a farm. His parents, devout Protestants, were Danish and Frisian peasants. He realized his unsuitability for farm life, and that he and his three brothers were not at all alike.
Between 1884 and 1891, he studied to become a woodcarver and illustrator in Flensburg, and worked in furniture factories as a young adult. He spent his years of travel in Munich, Karlsruhe and Berlin.In 1889, he gained entrance into the School of Applied Arts in Karlsruhe.[2] He was a drawing instructor at the school of the Museum of Industrial and Applied Arts (Industrie- und Gewerbemuseum; today the Textilmuseum, or Textile Museum) in St. Gallen, Switzerland, from 1892 to 1898.[3] He eventually left this job to finally pursue his dream of becoming an independent artist.
Career
As a child he had loved to paint and draw, but he was already 31 by the time he pursued this new career. When he was rejected by the Munich Academy of Fine Arts in 1898, he spent the next three years taking private painting classes, visiting Paris, and becoming familiar with the contemporary impressionist scene that was popular at this time. He married Danish actress Ada Vilstrup in 1902, and moved to Berlin, where he would meet collector Gustav Schiefler and artist Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, both of whom would advocate his work later in life. From that year, he named himself after his birthplace.
He became a member of the revolutionary expressionist group Die Brücke (The Bridge), of Dresden, in 1906, upon the group's invitation. This association lasted only until the end of the following year.[4] He was a member of the Berlin Secession from 1908 to 1910, but was then excluded owing to a disagreement with the leadership.[4] In Berlin, Nolde was strongly influenced by the collections of the Völkerkundemuseum in what was then Königgrätzer Straße, which he visited repeatedly and where he made over 120 drawings of exhibits from the Global South. His studies resulted in works such as Man, Woman and Cat (1912), in which Nolde depicted King Njoya's throne “Mandu Yenu”, which came to Germany from Cameroon under controversial circumstances, only slightly altered.[5] He exhibited with Wassily Kandinsky's Munich-based group Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider) in 1912; by this time he had achieved some fame, and was able to support himself through his art.[6]
Politics
Nolde was a supporter of the National Socialist German Workers' Party from the early 1920s, having become a member of its Danish section.[7] He expressed anti-semitic, negative opinions about Jewish artists, and considered Expressionism to be a distinctively Germanic style.[8] This view was shared by some other members of the Nazi party, notably Joseph Goebbels and Fritz Hippler.
Degenerate art
However, Adolf Hitler rejected all forms of modernism as "degenerate art", and the Nazi regime officially condemned Nolde's work. Until that time he had been held in great esteem in Germany. A total of 1,052 of his works were removed from museums, more than those of any other artist.[9] Some were included in the Entartete Kunst exhibition of 1937, despite his protests, including (later) a personal appeal to Nazi GauleiterBaldur von Schirach in Vienna. He was not allowed to paint—even in private—after 1941. Nevertheless, during this period he created hundreds of watercolors, which he hid. He called them the "Unpainted Pictures".
In 1942, Nolde wrote:
There is silver blue, sky blue and thunder blue. Every color holds within it a soul, which makes me happy or repels me, and which acts as a stimulus. To a person who has no art in him, colors are colors, tones tones...and that is all. All their consequences for the human spirit, which range between heaven to hell, just go unnoticed.[10]
While acknowledging his success as a brilliant colourist, greater awareness of Nolde's commitment to Nazism and a discussion of the relationship between his politics, denunciation of non-Jewish adversaries as Jews, and his art is considered in more recent scholarship.[13] A recent exhibition (Emile Nolde: A German Legend, The Artist during the Nazi Regime, Berlin National Gallery, 2019) examined Nolde's self-professed Nazi leanings, and the tendency of postwar art historians to downplay them.[14]
Death
He died in Seebüll, now part of Neukirchen, in 1956. The Nolde Stiftung Seebüll (The Nolde Foundation at Seebull) was created the same year and opened a museum dedicated to his life and work in 1957.
Body of work
Apart from paintings, Nolde's work includes many prints, often in color, and watercolor paintings of varied subjects (landscapes, religious images, flowers, stormy seas and scenes from Berlin nightlife). A famous series of paintings covers the German New Guinea Expedition, visiting the South Seas, Moscow, Siberia, Korea, Japan, and China. The Schiefler catalogue raisonné of his prints describes 231 etchings, 197 woodcuts, 83 lithographs, and four hectographs. He named a wartime series of 1300 works in watercolor on Japanese paper "Unpainted Paintings", made in the shadow of Hitler's decree.
Religious motifs
Although religious images make up a relatively small part of Nolde's artistic oeuvre, he considered some to be "milestones" with respect to his progression as an artist.[15][16]
Nolde, who grew up a farmer's son in a small, religious community near the German-Danish border, was left with lasting impressions of Judeo-Christian stories after reading the Bible in its entirety.[17][16] In his early religious works (1900–1904), he was unable to solidify his own style and distinguish himself from several role models, Jean-François Millet and Honoré Daumier.[16]
1906 was a turning point for Nolde when he shifted from an impressionistic style to a depiction of religious themes that emphasized the emotion of the moment, use of bright colors and only two dimensions of representation.[16] This new devotion to religious artwork was hastened by a near death experience in 1909 after drinking poisoned water at the age of 42.[18]
After 1911 Nolde's religious treatments—now including etchings—became darker and more ominous in tone than his previous works.[16] Even his wife, Ada, was unnerved by his bold vision. In response to his nine-part The Life of Christ, she wrote in a letter: "For the first few days I was only able to take a furtive peek now and then, so strong was the effect."[16][19]
Paintings
"South Sea Islander" South Sea Islander (Südsee-Insulaner II), lithograph in colors, on wove paper, Brooklyn Museum, 1915.
"Flower Garden" (without figure) (Blumengarten, ohne Figur), oil painting on canvas, 1908.
"Head with Pipe (Self Portrait)," lithograph, 1907.
"Clematis and Dahlia", 1940.
Major works
Nolde's work is exhibited at major museums around the world, including Portrait of a Young Woman and a Child, Portrait of a Man (c. 1926), and Portrait of a Young Girl (1913–1914) at the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia; and Prophet (1921) and Young Couple (1913) at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City. His most important print, The Prophet (1912), is an icon of 20th-century art.
Among his most important oils are Lesende junge Frau (1906), Blumengarten (ohne Figur) (1908), and Blumen und Wolken (1933).[20]
Other important works:
Lesende junge frau, 1906, oil on canvas, Kunsthalle Kiel
Blumengarten (ohne Figur), 1908, oil on canvas, Sotheby's purchaser 8 February 2012
Anna Wieds Garten, 1907, oil on canvas, Private Collection
Steigende Wolken, 1927, oil on canvas, Karl-Ernst-Osthaus-Museum, Hagen
Grosse Sonnenblumen, 1928, oil on canvas, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Blumen und Wolken, 1933, oil on canvas, Museum Sprengel, Hanover
In recent years, Nolde's paintings have achieved prices of several million US dollars, in auctions conducted by the leading international auction houses. On 8 February 2012, Blumengarten (ohne Figur) was sold by Sotheby's in London for US$3,272,673.[21]
Nazi-looted art
Nolde's work has become the focus of renewed attention after a painting entitled Blumengarten (Utenwarf)[22] from 1917, which now hangs in the art museum Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Sweden, and has been valued at US$4 million, was discovered to have been looted from Otto Nathan Deutsch, a German-Jewish refugee whose heirs, including a Holocaust survivor, are asking for its return. The Swedish government decided in 2007 that the museum must settle with the heirs.[23][24] Deutsch was forced to flee Germany before World War II and left for Amsterdam in late 1938 or early 1939. The painting was sold to the Swedish museum at an auction in Switzerland, where it had resurfaced in 1967.[25]
In 2000 the Wilhelm Lehmbruck Museum Foundation, Duisburg rejected a restitution request from the family of the Breslau (Wroclaw) collector Dr. Ismar Littmann for Nolde's painting Buchsbaumgarten (Boxtree Garden).[28]
^"Emil Nolde", Encyclopedia of World Biography. Detroit: Gale, 1998. Retrieved via Biography in Context database 27 September 2016.
^ abReuther, Manfred, "Nolde, Emil"(in German). In: Neue Deutsche Biographie 19 (1999), p. 328-330 [online version].
^Meyer, Andrea (2023). Nicht wiederzuerkennen. Kulturgüter aus Kamerun in der deutschen Bildproduktion. In: Atlas der Abwesenheit: Kameruns Kulturerbe in Deutschland [Unrecognizable. Cultural assets from Cameroon in German image production. In: Atlas of Absence: Cameroon's Cultural Heritage in Germany] (in German). Heidelberg: Reimer Verlag. pp. 201–203. ISBN978-3-496-01700-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
^Peters, Olaf. "Emil Nolde". In: Renee Price (Ed.), New Worlds: German and Austrian Art, 1890–1940. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2001. ISBN978-0-300-09446-6.[page needed]
^Fulda, B., Soika, A., & Ring, C. (2019) Emil Nolde: The Artist during the Third Reich. Munich: Prestel
^Jill Lloyd entry for Emil Nolde, Grove Dictionary of Art 1996.
^Knubben, Thomas. Emil Nolde: Unpainted Pictures. Ostfildern-Ruit, Germany: Hatje Cantz Publishers, 2000. p. 141.
^Quoted in Nolde: Forbidden Pictures [exhibition catalogue]. London: Marlsborough Fine Art Ltd., 1970. p. 9.
^Nolde, Emil (1931). Das eigene Leben. Die Zeit der Jugend 1867–1902. Berlin. p. 107.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^ abcdefDieterich, Caroline (2014). Krämer, Felix (ed.). Emil Nolde: Retrospective. Munich: Prestel. pp. 105–107.
^Nolde, Emil (1945). Das eigene Leben. Die Zeit der Jugend 1867–1902 (2nd expanded ed.). Cologne. p. 29.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Nolde, Emil (1934). Jahre der Kämpfe. Berlin. pp. 103–4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Ada Nolde to Luise Schiefler, February 1912, Archiv der Nolde Stiftung Seebüll
^Labedzki, Annette. "Emil Nolde – The German Expressionist Master of Darkness". Ezine Articles.
^Artdaily. "Moderna Museet and the Heirs of Otto Nathan Deutsch Reach Settlement on Disputed Painting". artdaily.cc. Archived from the original on 2021-04-29. Retrieved 2021-06-06. STOCKHOLM.- The heirs of Otto Nathan Deutsch and the Moderna Museet in Stockholm, Sweden have settled a dispute regarding the fate of the painting Blumengarten (Utenwarf) from 1917 by the German expressionist artist Emil Nolde. The artwork disappeared in 1939, following Otto Nathan Deutsch´s flight from Germany to the Netherlands due to Nazi persecution. It resurfaced in the early 1960´s and was acquired in 1967 by then museum director Pontus Hultén on behalf of the Moderna Museet from Galerie Roman Norbert Ketterer in Lugano, Switzerland. In 1961, the German Government paid a compensation to the Deutsch family for the lost artwork which will now be returned by the family. Blumengarten (Utenwarf) is being purchased by a private European collector who will loan the painting to the Moderna Museet for up to five years, after which other seminal expressionist paintings from the early 20th century will be lent to the museum for another five years. Both the Deutsch heirs and the Moderna Museet are satisfied with the outcome of the matter, which was settled under the principles of the 1998 Washington Conference, which calls for a fair and just solution taking all relevant circumstances into consideration
^"Lentos Kunstmuseum Linz - Provenance research". www.lentos.at. Retrieved 2021-06-06. 2015: Emil Nolde, Maiwiese (Maienwiese) [Meadow in May], 1915, (Inv. Nr. 94) to the heirs of Dr. Otto Siegfried Julius. The LENTOS is determined to do everything to make the provenance of its holdings as transparent as possible.