Details
Karl Hofer (1878-1955)

Blumenwerfende Mädchen

signed with monogram and dated lower left CH 34, inscribed with the title on the back of the stretcher, oil on canvas
48½ x 38¾in. (123.3 x 98.6cm.)

Painted in 1934
Provenance
Galerie Nierendorf, Berlin, from whom purchased for the Joseph Winterbotham Collection, Art Institute of Chicago, 1934
Transferred to the General Collection of the Art Institute of Chicago from the above in 1966
Literature
Winterbotham, Art Institute of Chicago, 1946, p. 24 (illustrated)
The Years 1946-1947, the Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago, vol. 42, pt. 3, Feb. 1940, p. 11 (illustrated)
The Art News, vol. 35, pt. 1, 26 Dec. 1936, p. 25 (illustrated p. 10)
Paintings in the Art Institute of Chicago, Netherlands, 1961, p. 217
Exhibited
Pittsburg, Carnegie Institute, Department of Fine Arts, Karl Hofer, Paintings, Drawings and Prints, Jan. 1939. no. 14
New York, Karl Nierendorf Gallery, 1939
Chicago, The Arts Club of Chicago, Paintings and Drawings by Karl Hofer, Dec. 1939, no. 23
Chicago, The University of Chicago, on loan, May-Sept. 1949 and Dallas, Museum of Fine Arts, Oct. 1949

Lot Essay

Karl Hofer is considered an Expressionist although in his style and choice of subject matter he is regarded as more romantic and less explosive than his contemporaries. In the years leading up to the Second World War it became increasingly difficult for him to work and he was eventually dismissed from the Berliner Hochschule in 1933. Blumenwerfende Mädchen is amongst his most celebrated compositions and one which he reworked several times during his career.
Women before an open window cast daisies, tulips and anemones to passers-by. The space emphasizes their isolation and confinement. Their faces and figures are typical of Hofer's women; their enigmatic glances are directed at once far away and deep within. Their forms are tight, compact, planar but rounded. These women are solid, material, sculptured forms which occupy space whereas a few years earlier..the figures were articulated by angular transparent planes." (I.K. Rigby, Karl Hofer, London 1976, p. 143-4)

This work came directly from the Galerie Nierendorf to the Art Institute of Chicago as a purchase for the Winterbotham Collection. In 1921 Joseph Winterbotham had established a fund to buy contemporary paintings by foreign artists to establish a collection which would be exhibited in the Institute. In 1947, after thirty-five paintings were acquired, the collection was officially presented to the Institute.

More from German and Austrian Art '95

View All
View All