Bernhard Hoetger
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Bernhard Hoetger (born 4 May 1874 in Dortmund; died 18 July 1949 in Interlaken) was an important German sculptor, painter and handicrafts artist of the Expressionist movement.
The son of a Dortmund blacksmith, he studied sculpture in Detmold from 1888 to 1892, before directing a workshop in Rheda-Wiedenbrück. After a spell at the Dusseldorf Arts Academy, he took a trip to Paris, where he was deeply influenced by Auguste Rodin, but also got to know Paula Modersohn-Becker. Later he was able to familiarise himself with Antoni Gaudí. In 1911, Hoetger was called up to the "artistic colony" of Darmstadt, where he was to remain for some time.
In 1914, inspired by Becker-Modersohn, he got to Worpswede. It was here where he met with Bremer's Ludwig Roselius, with whom he would go on to make his masterpiece, Bremen's Böttcherstraße, in an Expressionist style.
Like his patron Ludwig Roselius, Hoetger sympathised with the Nazi ideals and became a member of the Nazi Party. He tried, in vain, to instill himself through his art into the party, but Adolf Hitler himself declared it in 1936 to be degenerate. Expelled from the party, he settled in Switzerland, where he died in 1949.
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Translated from the German and French Wikipedias