Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - German oil painting photography

German oil painting photography

Introduction to Emile Nord:

Emil nolde (1867- 1956) was born in a peasant family in Schleswig, northern Germany. /kloc-at the age of 0/7, he entered the sculpture school in Sauermann, Fort Ferens to study woodcarving, and then studied at Karlsruhe Institute of Arts and Crafts. At the age of 32, he went to the Julian Academy of Fine Arts in Paris for further study.

Nold joined the Bridge Club on 1906. He is the most talented painter in this group. He can express the meticulous factors and strength of nature, primitiveness and spirit harmoniously through concise forms and passionate colors, especially his colors. He is a painter who expresses people's feelings with colors and plays loud and pleasant music with colored notes. The bright color treatment in his paintings was inspired by Impressionism. As he himself said, "color is my note, which is used to draw harmonious and contradictory sounds and chords." In his works, he pursues a cold and burning emotional expression, which radiates his subjective feelings. The beating and strong colors in his paintings bring people into a turbulent world, a primitive indulgence.

Nold's personality is a combination of farmer, hermit and prophet. After Hitler came to power, his art was declared "decadent" and banned.