Franz Joseph Esser (January 16, 1891, in Cologne – June 18, 1964, in Seefeld, Upper Bavaria) was a German painter, watercolorist, caricaturist, draftsman and graphic artist who was both close to the Cologne Progressives and a member of the Nazi party.
Esser was the son of master Cologne shoemaker Franz Anton Hubert Esser (1857–1940) and his wife Anna Maria (1867–1936), née Menné. On October 28, 1933, he married Hedwig Maria Hubertine Schuler (1900–1945), called "Hetty," the youngest of eleven children of the Cologne merchant Karl Heinrich Hubert Schuler (1849–1912) and Hedwig Caroline Louise (1852–1938), née Welter.[1] His wife's mother was the daughter of the Cologne painter Michael Welter. Franz Joseph and Hetty Esser had two children, Hedwig Mechtild (born 1935) and Franz Martin (born 1939). After the early death of his first wife, he married Liselotte Backhaus, née Schlüter, in 1950.[2]
In 1907, as a 16-year-old, Esser began painting oil pictures. In 1910 he graduated from the Royal Kaiser Wilhelm Gymnasium in Cologne. He studied art history at the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität in Bonn with Paul Clemen, at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität in Berlin and at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität in Munich with Heinrich Wölfflin until 1914. At the universities he also took drawing and modeling courses, where he met Max Ernst. In 1912 he went on a study trip to Constantinople. Following his studies, he was employed as a volunteer at the Bockhorni Royal Court Glass Painting Company in Munich.
At the beginning of the First World War in August 1914, Esser joined the German army. He was initially deployed to the Western Front on the Somme and in the Vosges, and later to the Eastern Front in Galicia and Romania, where he became a Russian prisoner of war in 1917. His subsequent odyssey through various camps in Siberia (Khabarovsk, Kansk) and a lengthy journey home through Manchuria can still be traced today on the basis of numerous sketches he made. He returned to Germany by sea via Vladivostok.
After his return, in 1921/22, he connected with Berlin artistic circles and became a member of the "Kommune," which soon dissolved, and in whose 1st and 2nd Manifestos he participated together with Otto Freundlich and Raoul Hausmann. Between 1922 and 1925 he stayed with or near his parents in Unkel. From there he made several trips to Prague.
From 1926 he lived mainly in Cologne, where he made several portraits - one litho and three pencil drawings - of Hetty Schuler, his future wife. In the same year, together with Peter Abelen (1884-1962) and Peter Hecker, he founded the sales association Der Kunstsammler. In the years up to 1933, his close contacts with the Cologne Progressive group developed, where he became acquainted with Gerd Arntz, Hannes Maria Flach, Marta Hegemann, Heinrich Hoerle, Franz W. Seiwert and Luise Straus-Ernst.[3]
Study visits took him from Cologne to Istanbul and Paris between 1927 and 1929, where he presented his work in solo exhibitions. In 1928/29 the Wallraf-Richartz-Museum in Cologne acquired several of Esser's works. In 1929 he participated in a double exhibition together with Adolf Schleicher at the Cologne Kunstsalon Dr. Becker & Newman.
Between 1930 and 1933 he worked part-time as a press artist for the Kölnische Zeitung, writing and illustrating reports for the baths supplement "Die Reise". Around 1930/31 he dedicated the abstract oil painting "The Tennis Player" to Hetty Schuler.. In 1932, together with Heinrich Maria Davringhausen, Peter Hecker, Heinrich Hoerle, Anton Räderscheidt and Franz W. Seiwert, he joined Group 32, which was forced to dissolve after the cession of power to the National Socialists.
In 1934, he moved with his wife to Munich, where he worked as a cartoonist for the Süddeutsche Sonntagspost and the Münchner Neuesten Nachrichte
The caricature "Hitler as a wolf" was created between 1936 and 1938. In 1937, three of his works (two watercolors, one print) were confiscated and destroyed in the Wallraf-Richartz-Museum as part of the Nazi campaign Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art).
Between 1943 and 1947 he created numerous of his landscape watercolors and ink drawings, while between 1945 and 1950 he produced a series of formally reduced glass window designs as part of the reconstruction effort, if only for reasons of cost. Three of these were produced at the Franz Mayer'sche Hofkunstanstalt in Munich. In his denazification proceedings, he was banned from working as a caricaturist for three years by the Spruchkammer München-Land on May 11, 1948. However, from 1949 to 1964 he was again active as a cartoonist at the Nürnberger Nachrichten. Along the way, he again worked to a limited extent with abstract oil painting. From 1958, designs for book illustrations moved to the forefront of his work.
Esser died at the age of 73 in Seefeld am Pilsensee and was buried in Gräfelfing.
Between 1908 and 1964 Franz Esser was continuously active artistically as a painter or caricaturist. His works include watercolors, ink, pencil, colored pencil and charcoal drawings, lithographs, woodcuts, etchings, oil paintings, stained glass window designs (3 of which were executed), caricatures, and illustrations of travelogues and children's books.[5]
Preferred subjects were landscapes, portraits, self-portraits (18 known so far), nudes, animal studies, still lifes, abstract compositions as well as religious and political subjects.[6]