Nov 3, 2010

Marsh Landscape

Marsh Landscape

c. 1930–1935

Emil Nolde

(German, 1876–1956)

Watercolor

Support: Japanese wove paper

Sheet: 34 x 45.5 cm (13 3/8 x 17 15/16 in.)

Bequest of Dr. Paul J. Vignos, Jr. 2011.125

Location

Description

Emil Nolde’s watercolors encapsulate the Expressionists’ quest for spontaneity and immediacy, and for painting by instinct rather than by adhering to traditional landscape structure. Throughout his life, Nolde made watercolors depicting the coast of the North Sea near his home. He used vivid colors to transform reality—evident in the three watercolors on view here—hoping to reveal nature’s power and magnetism. Working outdoors, Nolde considered his watercolors to be collaborations with nature: “I painted the white snow as it fell, and the finished or half-finished pictures lay around covered by the snow itself. . . . I loved to find nature collaborating in this way—a natural unity embracing the painter, his subject and the picture.”

See also
Collection: 
DR - German
Department: 
Drawings
Type of artwork: 
Drawing
Medium: 
Watercolor

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