Hans Hofmann was one of the twentieth century's most influential
teachers and one of its most inspired artists. Originally
from Germany, Hofmann immigrated to America in the 1930s
and became a citizen of the United States. By the
time he came to New York he had not only had direct experience
with avant-garde Parisian artists such as Henri Matisse
and contemporary movements including Fauvism and Cubism,
but also had an understanding of the ideologies of Wassily
Kandinsky. Because of his knowledge of European modernism,
he became a beacon for aspiring young artists in America. He
was among the first to incorporate the ideas of modernism
into a system of teaching; his methods influenced several
generations of painters.
Hofmann, born March 21, 1880, in Weissenburg, was raised
in Germany. In 1886, the family moved to Munich where
Hofmann’s father was employed by the government. At
school, the young Hofmann excelled in mathematics, sciences,
and music and learned to play the violin, piano, and organ. He
also began to draw. At the age of sixteen, and with
his father's assistance, Hofmann was made assistant to
the director of Public Works of the State of Bavaria. His
keen mathematical skills led to several scientific inventions;
science, however, was not his passion.
With a growing interest in art, Hofmann began to pursue
formal training in the subject. In 1898, he enrolled
in Moritz Heymann's school of art in Munich. He studied
with Impressionist painter Willi Schwartz and befriended
fellow students such as Jules Pascin. Through Schwartz,
Hofmann made the acquaintance of a Berlin collector Philipp
Freudenberg in 1903. With Freudenberg's support,
Hofmann moved to Paris around 1904 and remained there almost
permanently until 1914. Maria (Miz) Wolfegg, whom
he met in Munich in 1900 and whom he would eventually marry
in 1924, joined him in Paris around 1904.
Hofmann took full advantage of all the opportunities the
city had to offer an aspiring artist. He attended
night classes at the Ecole de la Grande Chaumière
and courses at the Académie Colarossi. While
in Paris, he also came to know the leading lights of the
vanguard art movements including Matisse, Picasso, Braque,
and Robert and Sonia Delaunay--he became particularly close
with the Delaunays. His style of painting from this
period was heavily influenced by Post-Impressionism, Fauvism,
and Cubism. During these years he began to exhibit
his work regularly, particularly in Germany. In 1908
and 1909, he exhibited with the New Succession in Berlin,
and in 1910 had his first show at Paul Cassirer Gallery,
also in Berlin. Hofmann and Wolfegg’s lives,
like so many others, were changed dramatically by World
War I. In 1914, the couple went to Corsica for Hofmann’s
health (he suffered from tuberculosis), but were soon called
to Germany because of illness in his family. While
en route to their homeland, the war broke and they could
not return to France. During this time Hofmann discovered
Wassily Kandinsky's On the Spiritual in Art and
was immediately struck by its philosophy. He also
came to know Gabriele Münter, who was a friend of
Wolfegg’s. She asked him to store some of the
works Kandinsky had left behind when he fled to Russia
and, in return for this favor, offered him one of the artist's
watercolors. Hofmann kept this picture his entire
life.
Once confined to Germany, Hofmann discovered that he could
not serve in the army because of his lung problems, so
he decided to teach. In the spring of 1915, he opened
the Hans Hofmann School of Fine Arts in Munich and thereafter
teaching became his main focus for the next several decades. Hofmann
stated his philosophy of art in the prospectus for his
Munich school, "Art does not consist in the objectivized
imitation of reality. Without the creative impulse
of the artist, even the most perfect imitation of reality
is a lifeless form . . . form receives its impulse from
nature, but is nevertheless not bound to objective reality;
rather, it depends to a much greater extent on the artistic
experience evoked by objective reality and the artist's
command of the spiritual means of fine art, through which
this artistic experience is transformed into reality in
painting."(1) These ideals did not change drastically
over the years, but the means by which he achieved them
did. Among the students who studied with Hofmann
after World War I ended were Worth Ryder, Louise Nevelson,
Vaclav Vytlacil, Carl Holty, Alfred Jensen, and Ludwig
Sander. He held summer classes throughout the 1920s
in Bavaria, Ragusa, Capri, and St. Tropez. He also
made frequent visits to Paris. Hofmann's demanding
schedule left him little free time to paint during these
years, but he drew incessantly.
The 1930s were a time of tremendous travel for Hofmann
and a period of growing appreciation for his art. In
1930, he was invited by his former pupil Worth Ryder to
teach a summer session at the University of California,
Berkeley. Ryder was chairperson of the Department
of Art at Berkeley. The following year he taught
at Berkeley again, and also gave classes at the Chouinard
School of Art in Los Angeles. Also in 1931, Hofmann
exhibited a series of drawings at the California Palace
of the Legion of Honor in San Francisco; this was his first
showing in America. In 1932, Hofmann was asked to
instruct at Chouinard again during the summer months; however,
because of growing political concerns at home, he did not
return to Germany at the end of the sessions, but settled
instead in New York and never returned permanently to his
homeland. His former student Vytlacil helped him
obtain position at the Art Students League. Hofmann
tried to keep his own school in Germany open during these
years, but in the fall of 1933 classes ceased, and by 1936
the school was closed. In 1939, his wife was able
to flee Europe and joined him in America.
While his European school may have folded, Hofmann was
determined to keep teaching. In the summers of 1933
and 1934, he was one of the guest instructors at the Thurn
School of Art in Gloucester, Massachusetts. Though
these kinds of assignments were surely enjoyable, Hofmann
wanted his own school, and in the fall of 1933 he established
the Hans Hofmann School of Fine Arts in New York. This
undertaking had more than one location during its lifetime;
it opened at 444 Madison Avenue, moved to 137 East 57th
Street in 1936, to 52 West 9th Street in 1936, and to 52
West 8th Street in 1938. Hofmann also found a summer
school in Provincetown, Massachusetts in 1935. Among
his many students were Lee Krasner, Helen Frankenthaler,
Burgoyne Miller, Charles and Ray Eames, Red Grooms, Joan
Mitchell, and Larry Rivers. Through a series of lectures
given in the winter of 1938-1939, Hofmann also came to
know Arshile Gorky and the critic Clement Greenberg. By
means of his tireless and tremendous teaching efforts Hofmann
influenced and inspired generations of artists. His
own paintings from this period show the continued influence
of early European modernism, especially the ideologies
of Matisse.
In the 1940s, Hofmann began to achieve recognition for
his painting and became an integral part of the vanguard
American art scene. In 1941, soon after he became
an American citizen, he had a one-person show at the Isaac
Delgado Museum of Art in New Orleans. The following
year Lee Krasner introduced Hofmann to Jackson Pollock. In
the early and mid forties, Hofmann and Pollock both experimented
with dripping their paint onto their canvases. Around
1944, Pollock introduced Hofmann to Peggy Guggenheim who
arranged his first solo show in New York at her Art of
This Century Gallery. During the forties Hofmann's
approach to painting began to change and his imagery became
much more abstract, though identifiable subject matter
still appeared in his pictures from this period.
Throughout the 1940s, Hofmann exhibited regularly in group
and one-person shows. Among the venues that included
his works were the Arts Club of Chicago, the Milwaukee
Institute of Arts, the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, and
67 Gallery, Mortimer Brandt Gallery, and Betty Parsons
Gallery, all in New York. Paintings by him were also
seen in galleries and museums in Pittsburgh, Denton, Texas,
Norman, Oklahoma, and Memphis, Tennessee. Beginning
in 1947, Hofmann was represented by the Kootz Gallery in
Manhattan and had a solo show there almost every year until
his death. Toward the end of the 1940s, Hofmann was honored
with a retrospective exhibition at the Addison Gallery
of American Art at The Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. In
addition, the Parisian Galerie Maeght held a major exhibition
of Hofmann's work in 1949. Hofmann renewed his friendships
with Picasso and Braque when he visited France for this
show.
In the final decades of his life, Hofmann was much more
prolific as an artist. He also remained at the center
of activity amongst the group of artists referred to as
the Abstract Expressionists. He participated in many
solo and group exhibitions, including the XXX Venice Biennale. In
the 1950s and 1960s, several retrospectives of his work
were held at institutions such as the Art Alliance of Philadelphia,
the Whitney Museum of American Art (which traveled to Des
Moines, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, Utica, and Baltimore),
the Fränkischen Galerie in Nuremberg (which traveled
to Cologne and Berlin), and the Museum of Modern Art. The
MoMA show was sent to venues across America as well as
in South America and Europe.
In 1958, Hofmann gave up his forty-odd-year teaching career
and devoted himself to painting full time. He moved
his studio into the buildings once occupied by his New
York and Provincetown art schools. In his late works
Hofmann abandoned almost all reference to recognizable
imagery and dedicated himself to the explorations of color,
space, and form in his pictures. His style alternated
between the highly energized and gestured drip paintings
and the quieter, heavily paint-laden, and constructed rectangles. In
addition, Hofmann suggested meaning and relationships in
his paintings through evocative and descriptive titles.
During the final years of his life Hans Hofmann received
many accolades. He was awarded an honorary membership
in the Akademie der Bildenden Kunste in Nuremberg. He
was also given honorary Doctor of Fine Arts degrees from
Dartmouth College, the University of California, Berkeley,
and the Pratt Institute, New York. In addition, he
received the Solomon Guggenheim International Award. Also,
he was made a member of the National Institute of Arts
and Letters.
The 1960s were a time of yet more change in Hofmann's
life, personally and professionally. In 1963, Maria
(Miz) Hofmann died. The same year Hofmann donated forty-five
of his paintings to the University of California, Berkeley
and agreed to help fund the construction of a permanent
space to display his work in the new university museum. In
1964, he met Renate Schmitz, his junior by nearly fifty
years, who was the inspiration for the Renate Series of
paintings executed by Hofmann in 1965. In that year,
and four month before Hofmann's death, the two married.
Hans Hofmann died in New York, February 17, 1966.
Collections:
University of California, Berkeley; San Francisco Museum
of Modern Art; Santa Barbara Museum of Art; Wadsworth
Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT; Tale University
Art Gallery, New Haven, CT; Smithsonian American Art
Museum, Washington, DC; National Gallery of Art, Washington,
DC; National Portrait Gallery, Washington, DC; Delaware
Art Museum, Wilmington, DE; High Art Museum, Atlanta,
GA; Wallrof Richartz Museum, Koln, Germany; The Art Institute
of Chicago; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Indianapolis
Museum of Art; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Fogg Art
Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA; Rose Art Museum
at Brandeis University, Waltham, MA; The Baltimore Museum
of Art; Flint Institute of Arts, Flint, MI; Frederick
R. Weisman Art Museum, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis,
MN; Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha, NE; The Newark Museum,
NJ; Montclair Art Museum, NJ; The Brooklyn Museum of
Art; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY; New
York University Collection; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum,
NY; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY; The Whitney Museum
of American Art, NY; The Cleveland Museum of Art; The
Toledo Museum of Art; Portland Art Museum, OR; Modern
Art Museum of Fort Worth, TX; Seattle Art Museum; The
Saint Louis Museum of Art; Art Gallery of Ontario, Canada;
and Tate Gallery, London, England
References:
Yohe, James, ed. Hans Hofmann, with essays by
Hans Hofmann, Sam Hunter, Frank Stella, and Tina Dickey. New
York: Rizzoli International Publications, 2002.
Dickey, Tina and Friedel, Helmut. Hans Hofmann. Munich:
Lenbachhaus, 1997; New York: Hudson Hills Press, 1998.
Goodman, Cynthia. Hans Hofmann. Munich:
Prestel-Verlag, 1990.
Bannard, Walter Darby. Hans Hofmann: A
Retrospective Exhibition. Houston: The Museum of
Fine Arts, 1976.
Hunter, Sam. Hans Hofmann. New York:
Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers, 1963.
Notes:
1) Helmut Friedel, "To sense the invisible and to be
able to create it--that is art," in Hans Hofmann (Munich:
Lenbachhaus, 1997; New York: Hudson Hills Press, 1998), 9.
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