Unpainted Pictures is what Emil Nolde called these fascinating watercolors created from 1938 to 1945 in the seclusion of his house at Seebull after his works in the museums had been confiscated by the Nazis and he himself had been forbidden to paint: small, free, imaginative sheets, accumulating in the course of the years. Nolde used to give them to friends for safe- keeping from Gestapo raids. "Unpainted" they were, since officially they were not allowed to exist, but also because Nolde had planned to expand on them later. Emil Nolde never offered these watercolors for sale and gave only a few of them away to friends. Today, this collection - for many the "summary and epitome of his work" - is owned by the Nolde Foundation at Seebull. The altogether 104 sheets are shown here on a large scale together with "marginal remarks" - diary-like, mostly dated notes, thoughts, questions and dreams, which date back to the time when the Unpainted Pictures were created: They include figurative pictures from the world of theatre, dance, mythology and the idiosyncratic imagery of the artist, as well as seascapes, marsh and mountain landscapes. (German edition ISBN 978-3-7757-0838-8) The artist: Emil Nolde (Nolde, Nordschleswig 1867-1856 Seebull). 1884-1888 apprenticeship in wood sculpting at a furniture manufacturing plant. 1888-1891, work as a carver in various furniture plants, further training at the School for Applied Arts at Karlsruhe and the Museum for Applied Arts in Berlin. 1892-1897 teacher for industrial drawing at the Museum for Industries and Trade at St. Gallen. 1898-1900 studies in Munich and Paris. 1906/07, member of the artists group 'Die Brucke'.