Hannah Höch

Hannah Höch

Hannah Höch self-portrait, c.1926
Born Johanne Höch
November 1, 1889
Gotha
Died May 31, 1978 (aged 88)
Berlin
Nationality German
Education Berlin College of Arts and Crafts
Known for Collage
Notable work Cut with the Kitchen Knife through the Beer-Belly of the Weimar Republic, 1919
Movement Dada

Hannah Höch (German: [hœç]; November 1, 1889 – May 31, 1978) was a German Dada artist. She is best known for her work of the Weimar period, when she was one of the originators of photomontage.

Biography

Hannah Höch was born Anna Therese Johanne Höch[1] in Gotha, Germany. In 1912 she began classes at the School of Applied Arts in Berlin under the guidance of glass designer Harold Bergen.[2] She chose the curriculum glass design and graphic arts, rather than fine arts, to please her father.[3] In 1914, at the start of World War I, she left the school and returned home to Gotha to work with the Red Cross.[4] In 1915 she returned to school, entering the graphics class of Emil Orlik at the National Institute of the Museum of Arts and Crafts.[5] Also in 1915, Höch began an influential friendship with Raoul Hausmann, a member of the Berlin Dada movement.[6] Höch's involvement with the Berlin Dadaists began in earnest in 1919. After her schooling, she worked in the handicrafts department for Ullstein Verlag (The Ullstein Press), designing dress and embroidery patterns for Die Dame (The Lady) and Die Praktische Berlinerin (The Practical Berlin Woman). The influence of this early work and training can be seen in her later work involving references to dress patterns and textiles. From 1926 to 1929 she lived and worked in the Netherlands. Höch made many influential friendships over the years, with Kurt Schwitters and Piet Mondrian among others. Höch, along with Hausmann, was one of the first pioneers of the art form that would come to be known as photomontage.

Hannah Höch, Cut with the Kitchen Knife through the Beer-Belly of the Weimar Republic, 1919, collage of pasted papers, 90 x 144 cm, Staatliche Museen, Berlin

Personal life and relationships

Art historian Maria Makela has characterized Höch's affair with Raoul Hausmann as "stormy", and identifies the central cause of their altercations—some of which ended in violence—in Hausmann's refusal to leave his wife.[7] Hausmann continually disparaged Höch not only for her desire to marry him, which he described as a "bourgeois"[7] inclination, but also for her opinions on art. Hausmann's hypocritical stance on women's emancipation spurred Höch to write "a caustic short story" entitled "The Painter" in 1920, the subject of which is "an artist who is thrown into an intense spiritual crisis when his wife asks him to do the dishes."[7]

Höch left her seven-year relationship with Raoul Hausmann in 1922. In 1926, she began a relationship with the Dutch writer and linguist Mathilda ('Til') Brugman, whom Höch met through mutual friends Kurt and Helma Schwitters. By autumn of 1926, Höch moved to Hague to live with Brugman, where they lived until 1929, at which time they moved to Berlin. Höch and Brugman's relationship lasted nine years, until 1935. They did not explicitly define their relationship as lesbian (likely because they did not feel it necessary or desirable), instead choosing to refer to it as a private love relationship.[8] In 1935, Höch began a relationship with Kurt Matthies, whom she was married to from 1938 to 1944.[8]

Women In Dada

While the Dadaists, including Georg Schrimpf, Franz Jung, and Johannes Baader, "paid lip service to women's emancipation," they were clearly reluctant to include a woman among their ranks.[9] Hans Richter described Höch's contribution to the Dada movement as the "sandwiches, beer and coffee she managed somehow to conjure up despite the shortage of money."[7] Raoul Hausmann even suggested that Höch get a job to support him financially. Höch was the lone woman among the Berlin Dada group, although Sophie Täuber, Beatrice Wood, and Baroness Else von Freytag-Loringhoven were also important, if overlooked, Dada figures . Höch references the hypocrisy of the Berlin Dada group and German society as a whole in her photomontage, Da-Dandy.

Höch's time at Verlang working with magazines targeted to women made her acutely aware of the difference between women in media and reality, even as the workplace provided her with many of the images that served as raw material for her own work. She was also critical of marriage, often depicting brides as mannequins and children, reflecting the socially pervasive idea of women as incomplete people with little control over their lives . Höch considered herself a part of the women's movement in the 1920s, as shown in her depiction of herself in Schnitt mit dem Küchenmesser DADA durch die letzte weimarer Bierbauchkulturepoche Deutschlands (1919–20). Her pieces also commonly combine male and female traits into one unified being. During the era of the Weimar Republic, "mannish women were both celebrated and castigated for breaking down traditional gender roles."[10] Her androgynous characters may also have been related to her bisexuality and attraction to masculinity in women (that is, attraction to the female form paired with stereotypically masculine characteristics).

Later years

Hannah Höchs Gardenhouse, Berlin-Heiligensee

Höch spent the years of the Third Reich in Berlin, Germany, keeping a low profile. She lived in Berlin-Heiligensee, a remote area in the outskirts of Berlin, hiding in a small garden house. She married businessman and pianist Kurt Matthies in 1938 and divorced him in 1944.Though her work was not acclaimed after the war as it had been before the rise of the Third Reich, she continued to produce her photomontages and exhibit them internationally until her death in 1978, in Berlin. Her house and garden can be visited at the annual Day of the Memorial (Tag des offenen Denkmals).

Works

Der archaische Erz-Engel vom Heiligense, sculpture in homage to Hannah Höch in Berlin-Reinickendorf

Höch was a pioneer of the art form that became known as photomontage. Many of her pieces sardonically critique the mass culture beauty industry at the time gaining significant momentum in mass media through the rise of fashion and advertising photography. Many of her political works from the Dada period equated women's liberation with social and political revolution.[11] In particular, her photomontages often critically addressed the Weimar New Woman, collating images from contemporary magazines.[12] Her works from 1926 to 1935 often depicted same sex couples, and women were once again a central theme in her work from 1963 to 1973. Höch also made strong statements on racial discrimination. Her most famous piece is Schnitt mit dem Küchenmesser DADA durch die letzte weimarer Bierbauchkulturepoche Deutschlands ("Cut with the Dada Kitchen Knife through the Last Weimar Beer-Belly Cultural Epoch in Germany"), a critique of Weimar Germany in 1919. This piece combines images from newspapers of the time mixed and re-created to make a new statement about life and art in the Dada movement. From an Ethnographic Museum (1929), one of Höch's most ambitious and highly political projects, is composed of twenty photomontages that depict images of European female bodies with images of African male bodies and masks from museum catalogues, creating collages that offer "the visual culture of two vastly separate civilizations as interchangeable—the modish European flapper loses none of her stylishness in immediate proximity to African tribal objects; likewise, the non-Western artifact is able to signify in some fundamental sense as ritual object despite its conflation with patently European features."[13]

Exhibitions

Höch's work has been exhibited internationally in solo and group exhibitions.

The Whitechapel Gallery in London presented a major exhibition of Höch's work from 15 January – 23 March 2014.[14] This exhibition was composed of over one hundred works from international collections that Höch created from the 1910s to 1970s. Highlights included Staatshäupter (Heads of State) (1918–20), Hochfinanz (High Finance) (1923),Flucht (Flight) (1931), and many works from the series From an Ethnographic Museum.[15]

Selected solo shows

Bibliography

External media
Images
Annotated "Cut with the Kitchen Knife...", Flickr[16]
Video
Höch's Cut with the Kitchen Knife Dada ..., Smarthistory[17]
  • Biro, M. The Dada Cyborg: Visions of the New Human in Weimar Berlin. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2009. ISBN 0-8166-3620-6
  • Chametzky, Peter. Objects as History in Twentieth-Century German Art: Beckmann to Beuys. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010.
  • Gaze, Delia. Dictionary of Women Artists, Volume One. London: Taylor & Francis, 1997.
  • Lavin, Maud. Cut With the Kitchen Knife: The Weimar Photomontages of Hannah Hoch. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press, 1993.
  • Lavin, Maud. "The Mess of History or the Unclean Hannah Höch". In: Catherine de Zegher (ed.), Inside the Visible. The Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston & MIT Press, 1996.
  • Makela, Maria. "Hannah Höch". In: Louise R. Noun (ed.), Three Berlin Artists of the Weimar Era: Hannah Höch, Käthe Kollwitz, Jeanne Mammen. Des Moines, Iowa: Des Moines Art Center, 1994.
  • Makela, Maria, and Peter Boswell, eds. The Photomontages of Hannah Hoch. Minneapolis: Walker Art Center, 1996.
  • McBride, Patrizia. "Narrative Resemblance: The Production Of Truth In The Modernist Photobook Of Weimar Germany." New German Critique: An Interdisciplinary Journal Of German Studies 115.(2012): 169-197.
  • Meskimmon, Marsha. We Weren't Modern Enough: Women Artists and the Limits of German Modernism. Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 1999.
  • Meskimmon, Marsha & Shearer West, ed. Visions of the 'Neue Frau': Women and the Visual Arts in Weimar Germany. Hants, England: Scolar Press, 1995.
  • Ohff, Heinz. Hannah Höch. Berlin: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Bildende Kunst, 1968.
  • Sante, Luc. "Dada's Girl: Hannah Höch Thumbs Her Nose at Art." Slate. 10 April 1997.

See also

Notes

  1. Biro 2009, p. 199.
  2. Makela 1994, p. 13
  3. Makela 1994, p. 13
  4. Makela 1994, p. 49
  5. Gaze 1997, p. 699
  6. Makela 1994, p. 49
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Makela, Maria (1997). von Ankum, Katharina, ed. Women in the Metropolis: Gender and Modernity in Weimar Culture. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 119-121.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Lavin, Maud. "The New Woman in Hannah Höch's Photomontages: Issues of Androgyny, Bisexuality, and Oscillation." in Reclaiming Female Agency: Feminist Art History After Postmodernism, edited by Norma Broude and Mary D. Garrard (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2005), 324–41.
  9. Maria Makela (1996). "By Design: The Early Work of Hannah Höch in Context". In Boswell, Peter; Makela, Maria; Lanchner, Carolyn. The photomontages of Hannah Höch (1. ed. ed.). Minneapolis: Walker Art Center. p. 64. ISBN 9780935640526.
  10. Makela 1994, p. 20.
  11. Maud Lavin, "Androgyny, Spectatorship, and the Weimar Photomontages of Hannah Höch," Maud Lavin, New German Critique , No. 51, Special Issue on Weimar Mass Culture (Autumn, 1990) , pp. 62-86: Duke University Press: http://www.jstor.org/stable/488172
  12. Juliet Koss,"Bauhaus Theater of Human Dolls," The Art Bulletin, Dec 2003; 85, 4
  13. Jolles, Adam (2006). "The Tactile Turn: Envisioning a Postcolonial Aesthetic in France". Yale French Studies (109): 21–22.
  14. whitechapelgallery.org
  15. From an Ethnographic Museum, moma.org
  16. "Annotated Cut with the Kitchen Knife". Flickr. Retrieved March 15, 2013.
  17. "Höch's Cut with the Kitchen Knife Dada ...". Smarthistory at Khan Academy. Retrieved March 15, 2013.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hannah Höch.