Sale: 374 / Modern Art, Dec. 04. 2010 in Munich Lot 55

 
Emil Nolde - Marschlandschaft


55
Emil Nolde
Marschlandschaft, 1935.
Watercolour
Estimate:
€ 40,000 / $ 44,000
Sold:
€ 70,760 / $ 77,836

(incl. surcharge)
Watercolor
Signed lower right. On Japon, firmly mounted to backing cardboard on verso of margin. 13,7 x 14,9 cm (5,3 x 5,8 in), the full sheetBacking cardboard: 23,3 x 24,5 cm (9,1 x 9,6 in).

Accompanied by a photo expertise from Dr. Martin Urban, Foundation Seebüll Ada and Emil Nolde, dated 30 May 1966.

PROVENANCE: Private collection North Rhine-Westphalia.

Emil Hansen was born near the German-Danish border on 7 August 1867. He adopted the name of his birth town as his artist name at a later date. Nolde completed an apprenticeship as a furniture designer and wood carver in Flensburg between 1884 and 1888 and then worked for various furniture factories in Munich, Karlsruhe and Berlin. He was employed as a teacher of industrial drawing at the Gewerbemuseum (Industrial Museum) in St. Gallen in 1892, where he taught until 1898. Nolde finally moved to Munich after deciding to become a painter, but the academy under Franz von Stuck dismissed him. He joined Adolf Hölzel in Dachau in 1899 to become his pupil and went to Paris in 1900 to increase his knowledge at the Académie Julien. In 1900 he rented a studio in Copenhagen and moved to the island Alsen in 1903. Nolde studied the Neo-Impressionists, which, around 1905, gradually led him away from his early Romantic Naturalism and to the discovery of his own style with a strong emphasis on color. During a sojourn in Alsen in 1906 Nolde met the painters of 'Die Brücke', a group he joined briefly in the same year. A series of portrait studies marked the artists discovery of the watercolor. Nolde's first attempts in 1909 at painting in this technique on non-absorbent paper, leaving large areas of the paper uncovered and dispensing with contours, were quite revolutionary. After a dispute with Max Liebermann, Nolde was excluded from the 'Berliner Sezession' and founded, together with other dismissed artists the 'Neue Sezession' in 1910 and participated in their exhibition until 1912. Less fascinated by the city-life of Berlin, which he recorded in expressionistic pictures, than by primitivism, Nolde painted still lives with exotic figures and mask pictures. He returned from an expedition to New Guinea in 1913 with lots of study material, which he worked up in numerous works until 1915. Since 1916, he spent his summers on the island Föhr and settled in Seebüll in 1928. The garden in Seebüll became an unfailing source of inspiration for his painting, but also coast areas and religious became his primary subjects.

Even in works in small formats Emil Nolde shows his ingenious mastery in composition. A seemingly dull landscape like the marshlands in Northern Germany, is charged with spectacular colors and thus attains an unusual monumentality. The composition’s almost strict parallelism is expanded to a spatial distance by means of color layers and thus intensifies to a statement that goes far beyond what is captured. The image’s abstraction is just a superficial impression. Nolde was guided by moods and atmospheres that he works up the very moment.

Defamed during the war and banned from exhibiting his works since 1941, Nolde spent the years 1939 to 1945 in Seebüll painting his 'unpainted paintings', more than 1000 small watercolors, which he took on in his oil paintings after 1945. In his last years, primarily watercolors with flower and landscape motifs from the neighborhood of his house in Seebüll, where Nolde died in 1956, came into existence. [KD].




55
Emil Nolde
Marschlandschaft, 1935.
Watercolour
Estimate:
€ 40,000 / $ 44,000
Sold:
€ 70,760 / $ 77,836

(incl. surcharge)