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Art's tragic risk-taker

In her 10-year career, Eva Hesse became one of the most important post-war figures.

December 17, 2009 11:30
Eva Hesse in her New York studio in 1966

By

Julia Weiner ,

Julia Weiner

3 min read

When Eva Hesse died at the age of 34, she was a well-known and successful artist. In the 40 years since her death, she has become even more famous, recognised as a key figure in the history of post-war art.

Hesse wrote about her life that, “there isn’t a thing that hasn’t been extreme — personal health, family, economic situations”, and she was not exaggerating. Tragedy seemed to follow her about.

Born in Hamburg in 1936, she and her sister Helen were sent to a children’s home in Amsterdam in 1938 to escape the Nazis. A year later, the family were reunited and travelled first to London and then to New York where they settled. However, Hesse’s mother, Ruth, suffered from severe depression and, in 1946, a year after she was divorced from her husband, she committed suicide. Eva was aged just 10. She recovered from this trauma sufficiently to enjoy a career as an original and innovative sculptor, but her own life was cut short when she was diagnosed with a brain tumour in 1969 and died a year later.

It is tempting to interpret Hesse’s work only in terms of the tragic events she experienced. It is a temptation that should be resisted, according to Briony Fer, co-curator of an exhibition of a new Hesse exhibition at the Camden Arts Centre in north London.

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