| |
|

To Miz-Pax Vobiscum
Hans Hofmann
Hans Hofmann, American, born Germany, 1880-1966
1964, Oil on canvas, 78 x 84 inches
Collection of Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Museum Purchase
About the Artist
Hans Hofmann was born in Germany in 1880 and first studied
painting in Munich at the age of eighteen. In 1904 he moved
to Paris, where he became friends with Henri Matisse and
other Fauve artists. Through them he became acquainted with
Picasso and other artists who were experimenting with Cubism.
In 1914, he returned to Munich and opened an art school
where he taught the contemporary ideas from Paris. His school
became quite famous and many students came from abroad to
study there.
In 1923, Hofmann married Maria (Miz) Wolfegg, whom he had
known for twenty-three years. Their marriage lasted for
the next forty years, until her death in 1963. In 1930 and
1931, Hofmann came to Berkeley, California, to teach during
the summers. By 1932, he chose to stay permanently in the
United States. In 1937, deciding that he did not wish to
return to Europe, he opened his own school in New York.
During his years in New York, Hofmann taught many of the
young American artists who would be the important leaders
of Abstract Expressionism, including Helen Frankenthaler,
Red Grooms, Louise Nevelson, Lee Krasner, and Larry Rivers.
Though he was older, Hofmann also became friends with Jackson
Pollock, Robert Motherwell, Mark Rothko and other young
artists. With them he would participate in creating Abstract
Expressionism, the first American art movement to be recognized
internationally.
About the Art
The title To Miz-Pax Vobiscum means peace be with you. This
work was painted the year after Hofmann s wife's death and
is the second painting he did commemorating her life. The
first was done soon after she died and is more somber, in
tones of black and red on white. To Miz-Pax Vobiscum is
a more joyful celebration of her life. He chose intense
colors and powerful shapes to honor the one who lived with
my art and for my art.
Additional Information
Hans Hofmann was influenced by Matisse and by Cubism, but
as he worked he made innovations that were uniquely his
own. He combined many different styles during his lifetime.
Sometimes he would use puddles and drips of paint with thickly
applied rectangles of paint. Some of his paintings have
titles that refer to landscapes and some have musical references.
He claimed that his ideal was to form and paint as Schubert
sings, and as Beethoven creates a world in sound. Perhaps
we can compare this painting to music. As you look at To
Miz-Pax Vobiscum imagine what music these brilliant colors
suggest. Describe the mood of the music and the mood of
the painting.
About the Time and Place
Americans were suffering under the Great Depression during
the early 1930s. Hans Hofmann moved permanently to the United
States in 1932, and in 1941 he became a U.S. citizen. One
of the reasons Hofmann had decided to stay in the U.S. was
the rise to power of Adolf Hitler in Germany during the
years between World War I and World War II. Between 1941
and 1945, the U.S. fought in World War II.
During the early 1950s, television became a part of most
American households, and the U.S. participated in another
war, the Korean War. In 1954, the Supreme Court ruled that
segregation in public schools was unconstitutional, and
the next year Martin Luther King, Jr., began organizing
African-American citizens to protest discrimination. In
1957, the Russians launched Sputnik I , the first space
satellite, and Americans immediately began to place more
emphasis on space research and on the teaching of math and
science in schools.
In 1961, Alan B. Shepard, Jr., became the first American
to travel in space, and in 1963, about 200,000 American
civil rights demonstrators, both black and white, staged
a march in Washington, D.C. Demonstrations and marches were
held in many other cities also as civil rights became a
major national issue. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed
discrimination in employment, voter registration, and public
accommodations. Another Civil Rights Act in 1968 was designed
to end discrimination in the sale and renting of housing.
At the urging of President Lyndon Johnson, Congress also
provided financial aid for the needy as part of his War
on Poverty.
In spite of these changes, unrest in America's cities continued.
In 1965, the year after Hofmann painted this work, American
troops were sent to Vietnam.
|
|
|
|