Hans Wilhelm Hupp Explained

Hans Wilhelm Hupp (1896–1943) was a German art historian, author and curator. From 1933 to 1943 he directed the Museum Kunstpalast of the city of Düsseldorf..

Life

In 1919, Hupp received his doctorate in Bonn with the dissertation Entwicklungsgeschichte der Kunst Carl Friedrich Lessing. In 1922 he published it under the title Karl Friedrich Lessing, a transitional master of the Düsseldorf school of painting from Romanticism to Realism. As early as 1916, he had appeared in the cultural magazine with the article Zum Problem des modernen Kirchenbaues, im besonderen des katholischen. In it, he had advocated overcoming the sacral style and a contemporary renewal of church architecture.

In 1925, Hupp entered the service of the Wallraf-Richartz-Museum & Fondation Corboud in Cologne, first as a volunteer, then as a research assistant. When the position of director of the 17th to 20th century gallery was vacant there in 1928, he held it on an interim basis.[1] On 1 March 1934, Hupp succeeded as full-time director of the Kunstmuseum Düsseldorf,[2] he had already held it provisionally since 1933.

As Düsseldorf museum director, he opened the exhibition "Galerie der Neuzeit" on 17 July 1935, a compilation of 20th-century paintings and sculptures whose concept he had been working on since 1934.[3] Under pressure from the Nazis, this exhibition, whose location they defamed as a "chamber of horrors of art",[4] to be closed just one day after its opening.[5] In the summer of 1935, the mayor of Düsseldorf decided to focus the collection entirely on regional art. The "Gallery of Modern Art" was thus de facto at an end; from 1937 it was officially called the "Rhenish-Westphalian Gallery". In 1935, the first modern works were given away: In September, a painting by Paul Klee was exchanged for a drawing by Wilhelm Leibl.[6] Works by KünstlerSammelwerkn such as Emil Nolde, Max Pechstein or Otto Dix were also sold.[7] The confiscation action "Degenerate Art" followed. [8] This effectively dissolved the "Gallery of Modern Art" in 1937. 112 paintings, eleven sculptures and 929 works on paper were lost as a result of these actions.[9]

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Sylvia Neysters, Helmut Ricke, Johannes auf der Lake: Rückblick nach vorn. 75 years of museum work. Kunstmuseum Düsseldorf. Düsseldorf 1988,
  2. Verwaltungs-Bericht der Stadt Düsseldorf für den Zeitraum vom 1. April 1933 bis zum 31. März 1936. Droste Verlag, Düsseldorf 1937, (Numbered)
  3. Book: Kathrin DuBois. Contemporary Art in the Düsseldorf Kunstmuseum and the Failure of the Galerie der Neuzeit . 1937. Die Aktion "Entartete Kunst" in Düsseldorf. Düsseldorf . 2017 . 14–25.
  4. , (ed.): Zur Geschichte von Wissenschaft, Kunst und Bildung an Rhein und Ruhr nebst Resümees der Historiker- und Kunsthistoriker-Tagung von Essen vom Juni 1982. Rheinland-Westfalen im Industriezeitalter, vol. 4, Peter Hammer Verlag, Wuppertal 1985,,
  5. Wolfgang Horn: Kulturpolitik in Düsseldorf. Situation and new beginning after 1945. Leske Verlag und Budrich GmbH, Opladen 1981,,
  6. Book: Kathrin DuBois . Museum Kunstpalast, Düsseldorf . Contemporary Art in the Düsseldorf Art Museum and the Failure of the Gallery of Modern Art . 1937. Die Aktion "Entartete Kunst" in Düsseldorf. Düsseldorf . 1937. 20 ff.
  7. Christoph Zuschlag: "Freiwillige" Abgaben moderner Kunst durch deutsche Museen nach 1933. In: Tanja Baensch, Kristina Kratz-Kessemeier, Dorothee Wimmer (ed.): Museen im Nationalsozialismus. Actors – Places – Politics. Böhlau Verlag, Cologne 2016,, (Google Books)
  8. Book: . 1937. The "Degenerate Art" Action in Düsseldorf . Museum Kunstpalast, Düsseldorf. Düsseldorf . 2017.
  9. 1937. The "Degenerate Art" Action in Düsseldorf. Ed. Museum Kunstpalast, Düsseldorf 2017,