Stephanie Hollenstein (18 July 1886 in Lustenau – 24 May 1944 in Vienna) was an Austrian Expressionist landscape and still-life painter. A member of the Nazi Party, Hollenstein was lesbian[1][2] and tried to defend fellow-artists against charges of degeneracy, though usually without success.[3][4]

Stephanie Hollenstein
(date unknown)

Biography edit

She was born to a peasant farming family and initially worked as a cowherd. Her first paintings were made at that time, featuring animals and shepherds, with brushes made from animal hair and colors from berries. In 1904, she was admitted to the Königliche Kunstgewerbeschule in Munich, on the strength of the drawings she presented as samples.[5] After completing the courses there in 1908, she opened a small painting school in Schwabing, which was in operation for two years. In 1913, upon the recommendation of Franz von Defregger, she was awarded a scholarship that enabled her to study for a year in Italy.[6]

World War I edit

 
Hollenstein in World War I
 
Portrait of
Dr. Franziska Groß

At the beginning of World War I, she took a medical training course and, in 1915, went to Vorarlberg, where she joined the Standschützen under the name "Stephan Hollenstein". Although her comrades-in-arms were aware of the deception, her superiors did not discover it for several months; at which time she was sent home.[5]

This incident attracted public attention, however, and she was assigned as a war painter for the "Kriegspressequartier [de]" (War Press Bureau). In that capacity, she was sent to the front on three occasions and, in 1916, was among the first recipients of the Karl Troop Cross. She later received numerous commissions from the Museum of Military History.[6]

After the war, she lived in Vienna with her companion, Franziska Groß (1900-1973), who later became a doctor, and held several exhibitions with the Künstlerhaus Wien, the Vienna Secession and the Hagenbund.[5] Her activities were interrupted for a time in 1928, following an accident that resulted in a double ankle fracture, but she was able to get treatment from Lorenz Böhler, a doctor who is credited with establishing the field of accident surgery.[6] She recovered completely and made extensive travels through Germany and Italy.

Nazi years edit

In the 1930s, she was attracted to the "Männlichkeitskult" (Masculinity Cult) and the military ideals promoted by the Fascists. She became a secret member of the Nazi Party (when it was still officially banned in Austria), then rejoined openly after the Anschluss.[6] From that time until 1943, she was chairperson of the "Vereinigung Bildender Künstlerinnen der Reichsgaue der Ostmark" (Association of Women Artists of the Reichsgau of Austria).[5] During her tenure, she defended the sculptor, Albert Bechtold [de], and others against charges that their art was "Degenerate"; unsuccessfully for the most part. An application for the title of "Professor" was denied on the grounds that she was a strictly local artist whose work often did not set a good example.

She resigned her position for health reasons. The following year, she suffered a heart attack and died shortly after. Her remains were returned to Lustenau for burial. A municipal art gallery named in her honor was opened in 1971.

Selected paintings edit

References edit

  1. ^ Granda, David (February 5, 2019). "Las otras Klimt salen del ostracismo" [The other Klimt women emerge from ostracism]. El País (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 3 October 2023. Retrieved 3 October 2023. Vanguardista, lesbiana y nazi ("Avant-garde, lesbian and Nazi")
  2. ^ Bradley, Kimberly (April 19, 2019). "A Show in Vienna Seeks to Highlight the Female Artists of Austria's Golden Age. Here Are 5 Women That Art History Forgot". Artnet. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
  3. ^ Kain, Evelyn (Spring–Summer 2001). "Stephanie Hollenstein: Painter, Patriot, Paradox". Woman's Art Journal. 22 (1): 27–33. doi:10.2307/1358728. ISSN 0270-7993. OCLC 1319814818.
  4. ^ Morowitz, Laura (2023). Art, Exhibition and Erasure in Nazi Vienna (1st ed.). England, UK: Routledge. p. 49. ISBN 978-1032405889.
  5. ^ a b c d "Die sammlung "Stephanie Hollenstein"" [The "Stephanie Hollenstein" Collection]. Galerie Hollenstein (in German). Archived from the original on August 1, 2015. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d Amann, Brynhild (2005). "Stephanie Hollenstein". Neue Ordnung (in German). No. 4. Ares Verlag. Retrieved 3 October 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Willi Oberfrank, Helmut Gassner: Stephanie Hollenstein. 1886–1944 (exhibition catalog). Marktgemeinde Lustenau, 1994, ISBN 3-900954-03-8

External links edit