Louis Christian Hess
Louis Christian Hess, artistic name of Alois Anton Hess, known also as Christian Hess was an Austrian painter and sculptor of the German Neue Sachlichkeit during the 1920s.
Early years
In 1915 Hess exhibited his first works - drawings, tempera and engravings - at the "Turn und Taxishof Galerie" in Innsbruck. During World War I Hess fought on the French front at the Somme and Ardennes. After the war, from 1919 to 1924 he attended the Bayerische Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Munich, in the class of Prof. C. Becker-Gundhal. In 1920 Hess attended the first collective exhibition "Ausstellung Junger Münchner - Graphische Kunstwerkstätten" in Munich presented by George Jacob Wolf. In the following 1921 exhibition "Ausstellung Junger Münchner" at the Gemälde Galerie Sct. Martinus, also in Munich, he exhibited works alongside pieces by Florian Bosch, Adolf Hartmann, Siegfried Kühnel, Georg Liebhardt, Josef Nickl, Eugen Siegler, Bernhard Therhorst and the sculptors Lothar Dietz and Benno Miller. After his sister Emma moved to Sicily in 1924, Hess made frequent trips to Italy, drawing inspiration from the colour and mediterranean light that he poured into his art.Christian Hess and the Juryfreie
In 1928 he became close to Max Beckmann until his exile. Hess participated in the "Sommer Ausstellung des Deutschen Künstler Verbandes AUFBAU - E. V." in Munich and some of his paintings were shown in Berlin. In 1929 he joined the "Juryfreie" movement, becoming its leader until his ban in 1933 by the National Socialist regime. In "Aus meinem Künstnotizbuch", the art critic Wilhelm Hausenstein wrote: "Juryfreie reveals itself as a prominent artistic group... I notice Christian Hess, Josef Scharl, Fritz Burkhardt, Grassmann, Panizza and sculptors such as Spengler and Zeh". Art magazines published Hess's works: the Lipsian "Cicerone" published the painting "Am Strand" ; the Munich magazine "Jugend", official voice of the "Jugendstil" movement, published on the cover of the April 1930 issue the oil painting "Fischer mit roter Weste", central part of a triptych shown at the Secession exhibition.In the same year, the catalogue "Zweijahrbuch" presented by the critic Hans Eckstein, with essays by Franz Rho, Oskar Maria Graf and Wolfgang Petzet, published the paintings "Neptun" and "Matrosen" produced in Messina. Hess frescoed the thermal bath in Oeynhausen. "Jugend" reproduced "Am Wasser", the central part of a triptych shown at the June Secession exhibition.
On 6 June 1931, in the Munich Glaspalast fire, works by Hess and other artists were burnt. For the "Juryfreie" artists an extraordinary exhibition was organised in the German Museum. In the same year Hess was in Rome with his friend Karl Hofer. Back in Germany there began a movement of painters, sculptors and architects and in the exhibition "Bildhauer Maler Architekt" Hess presented cartoons for the frescoes of a cinema with sound in Breslau. 1932 was still a year of great artistic vitality. With the "Juryfreien" Hess exhibited the painting "Wartesaal III Klasse in Bologna" and sculptures in the Munich "Lenbach Galerie" and in Düsseldorf. A season of exhibitions followed with the Deutscher Künstlerbund in Berlin, Nuremberg, Koenigsberg, Danzig and Rostock.