Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Heinrich Hoerle

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Heinrich Hoerle


Role
  
Artist

Heinrich Hoerle Heinrich Hoerle Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Died
  
July 7, 1936, Cologne, Germany

Heinrich Hoerle (1 September 1895 – 7 July 1936) was a German constructivist artist of the New Objectivity movement.

Heinrich Hoerle penccil Heinrich Hoerle Franz Wilhelm Seiwert and

Hoerle was born in Cologne. He studied at the Cologne School of Arts and Crafts but was mostly self-taught as an artist. After military service in World War I he met Franz Wilhelm Seiwert in 1919 and worked with him on the journal Ventilator. Together with his wife Angelika (1899–1923), Hoerle became active in the Cologne Dada scene. He co-founded the artists' group Stupid, and in 1920 he published the Krüppelmappe (Cripples Portfolio). Hoerle's work retained a certain dour absurdism after he adopted a figurative constructivist style influenced by the Russians Vladimir Tatlin and El Lissitzky, by Fernand Léger, and by the Dutch movement De Stijl. His paintings feature generic-looking figures, presented in strict profile or in stiff, frontal poses.

Heinrich Hoerle wwwpenccilcomfilesU73722906725121318204153jpeg

In 1929 he began collaboration with Seiwert and Walter Stern on the publication of "a-z", the journal of the Cologne Progressives art group. He was among the many German artists whose works were condemned as degenerate art when the Nazis took power in 1933. He died in Cologne in 1936.

Heinrich Hoerle Kln Progressiv 192033 Klnerde Klnerde

Public collections holding works by Heinrich Hoerle include Museum Ludwig, Cologne; Kölnisches Stadtmuseum; Stadtmuseum Düsseldorf; The Von der Heydt Museum in Wuppertal; and the Busch-Reisinger Museum in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Heinrich Hoerle Heinrich Hoerle SelfPortrait in Front of Trees and

References

Heinrich Hoerle Wikipedia