Emil Nolde
Emil Nolde (born Hans Emil Hansen; August 7, 1867 – April 15, 1956) was a German-Danish painter and printmaker recognized as a pioneer of Expressionism through his bold use of color and form to convey emotional and spiritual intensity.[1][2]
Born in the rural Schleswig region on the Danish-German border to a farming family, Nolde initially worked as a woodcarving teacher and furniture designer before pursuing formal art training in Flensburg, Paris, and Munich, where he encountered Post-Impressionist influences that shaped his shift toward modernist styles.[1][3]
From 1906 to 1907, he briefly associated with the Die Brücke group in Dresden, adopting their emphasis on subjective expression over naturalistic representation, though he soon pursued an independent path focused on religious motifs, North Sea landscapes, exotic subjects from his Pacific travels, and vibrant floral still lifes executed in oils, watercolors, and prints.[1][4]
Nolde's career intersected controversially with the Nazi regime: an ethnic German nationalist with antisemitic views who sought party membership and praised Hitler early on, he nonetheless saw over 1,000 of his works confiscated as "degenerate art" in 1937, endured public mockery in exhibitions, and received a secret painting ban in 1941, prompting him to produce small "unpainted pictures" in watercolor during isolation.[5][6][7]