Biographie
1904–1989
Born in 1904 in Leipzig, Germany, Hans Hartung took an interest in painting aged eighteen.
A series of watercolours dating 1922 already showed his experimental approach in the use of stains, curves and lines, the building blocks of his future paintings. Hartung was equally unsatisfied with the formal education he received during 1925–1926 at the Dresden Fine Art Academy, as with the lessons of André Lhote and Fernand Léger he took upon his arrival in Paris in 1926. Hartung preferred artistic freedom and developed as of the early 1930s his revolutionary technique of gesture and creation of spatial dynamism in order to render the inexpressible onto canvas. Hartung went on to eliminate all figurative elements and to use a variety of non-traditional tools such as spray guns, brooms and tree branches. Hartung described his method as a balance between chance and control: ‘At the beginning, I act in total freedom. Work, by following its own course, constrains me more and more, and I am less and less at liberty to choose’.
Despite his exhibitions, Hartung remained relatively unknown during the pre-War years, and faced considerable financial difficulties. Having divorced his first wife, the painter Anna-Eva Bergman, he married in 1938 Roberta Gonzalez, daughter of his Spanish sculptor friend.
Considered by the Nazi rule as a degenerate artist, Hartung conscripted in the Foreign Legion to defend France against Germany but had to exile himself after the Nazi invasion of France in 1940. In 1943 Hartung arrived in Spain where he was first detained in a refugee camp but subsequently was able to join the Foreign Legion again. Sadly, Hartung lost one of his legs during the battle of Belfort in 1945, leaving him to the constrictions of a wheelchair.
Back in Paris in 1945, Hartung took the French nationality in 1946. Post-War Paris proved more receptive to his art. Thus, Hartung had his first one-man show in 1947, and in 1948 he was invited to participate in the Venice Biennale. Finally, Hartung was recognised as a major representative of the Post-War movement of Informal Art.
In 1960, the Venice Biennale awarded him the much-coveted Grand Prize for Painting. At that time, Hartung produced large formats with acrylic or vinyl paints, which he scratched afterwards. Due to his international success, Hartung was able to build a house and studio in Antibes in 1968. Here he spent time with his first wife Anna-Eva Bergman, whom he had re-married in 1958. In 1973 Hartung moved to Antibes full-time and continued his pictorial researches, this time looking for inspiration in his large body of photographic work. Hartung also dedicated time to writing. Hartung died in Antibes in 1989.
During the new millennium, Hartung was finally internationally recognised as an innovator and a key figure of Post-War Art in general and Gestural Painting and Tachism in particular.
In 2019, the ‘Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris’ hosted a large retrospective. La fabrique du geste.