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Die Brücke --- nationaal-socialisme --- Joodse kunst --- tentoonstellingen (Berlijn) --- entartete Kunst --- emigratie --- Pechstein, Max --- Schapire, Rosa --- Heckel, Erich --- Schmidt-Rottluff, Karl --- Kirchner, Ernst Ludwig --- 1932 - 1949 --- 20ste eeuw
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After the Second World War ended in 1945 the Expressionist Emil Nolde (1867-1956) came to symbolise the epitome of the modern German artist persecuted by the National Socialist regime. More works were confiscated from Nolde during the 'Degenerate Art' campaign than from any other artist, and no other artist's works were as prominently pilloried as Nolde's in the initial Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art) shows that began travelling the country in 1937. In 1941 he was forbidden to practise as an artist. How do Nolde's ostracism and the professional ban fit together with our knowledge that he had been a Party member since 1934 and that he remained loyal to the National Socialist regime until the end of the war? This publication explains Nolde's lasting commitment to National Socialism. It underscores the importance of his work to his autobiography, exposes the consequences of his increasingly radical anti-Semitism, and presents a new perception of the professional ban and the creation of the 'Unpainted Pictures'. Previously unpublished letters and documents, as well as many lesser-known works from the artist's estate at the Stiftung Seebüll Ada and Emil Nolde, provide insight into Nolde's behaviour and artistic practice during the National Socialist era.
nazisme --- Nolde-Museum, Stiftung Seebüll Ada und Emil Nolde (Neukirchen bei Niebüll) --- entartete Kunst --- Wereldoorlog II --- antisemitisme --- geschiedenis --- Nolde, Emil
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