| Karl
Hofer, German (1878 - 1955)
Karl Hofer was born in Karlsruhe on 11 October 1878 as son
of a military musician. After an apprenticeship in C.F. Müller's
court bookstore, he began to study at the Großherzoglich
Badische Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Karlsruhe in
1897. Here he studied under Poetzelberger, Kalckreuth and Thoma
until 1901. None of these teachers, however, were able to provide
him with ideas for his ambitious striving for a new art form
and he soon came under the influence of Arnold Böcklin.
Hofer travelled to Paris in 1900 where he was greatly impressed
by Henri Rousseau's naive painting. The art historian Julius
Meier-Graefe introduced Hofer not only to private collections
worth while seeing in Paris, but also drew his attention to
Hans von Marées. As a result Hofer decided in 1903 to
spend a couple of years in Rome. His painting, which was until
then influenced by Böcklin's Symbolism, changed in favour
of Marées' classic-Arcadian concept. In 1904 the Kunsthaus
Zurich presented Hofer's first one-man show within the ‚Ausstellung
moderner Kunstwerke', which was afterwards shown in an extended
version at the Kunsthalle Karlsruhe and at the Folkwang-Museum
in Hagen and in Weimar in 1906. From 1908 Hofer lived temporarily
in Paris. The stay changed his style through dealing with influences
of Cézanne, French Impressionists and El Greco. In 1913
the artist moved to Berlin. He was interned in France one year
later and only returned to Germany in 1917. He accepted a post
as a professor at the Kunstschule in Berlin-Charlottenburg
in 1921. On the occasion of his 50th birthday a retrospective
took place at the Kunsthalle Mannheim, the Berlin Secession'
and Alfred Flechtheim's gallery in Berlin. His art was considered "degenerate" during
the 'Third Reich' and he was dismissed from his teaching post
in 1933/34. His works were exhibited in 1937 in the Munich
exhibition 'Entartete Kunst'. Hofer lived in Berlin for the
rest of his life. He was the director of the Hochschule für
Bildende Künste in Berlin.
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