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Hans Hofmann 
Black and White Still Life, Oil on paper, 1949, 23 x 29"  Price on request
Studio, Mixed Media on Paper, 1942, 14 x 11"  Price on request
The Rabbit, Oil on panel, 1945, 23 x 17"  Price on request
Untitled, India ink on paper, 1933, 8 x 11"  Price on request
Untitled, Gouache and Watercolor on Paper, c. 1950-55, 23 x 29"  Price on request
Untitled, India Ink on Paper, n.d., 8 x 11"  Price on request
Untitled, India Ink on Paper, 1935, 8 x 11"  Price on request
Untitled 13605 , India ink on paper, 1932, 8 x 11"  Price on request
Untitled 13607, India ink on paper, 1935, 11 x 8"  Price on request
Untitled 13608, India ink on Paper, 1935, 8 x 11"  Price on request
Untitled 13609, India ink on Paper, 1930, 8 x 11"  Price on request
Untitled 1942, Crayon and India ink on Paper, 1942, 11 x 8"  Price on request

From 1903 to 1914 Hofmann was involved in the lively community of artists in Paris; a community that included Picasso, Braque, and Matisse. In 1915 he established an art school in Munich, which he left in the early 1930’s when he recognized a growing inhospitable political climate. He immigrated to the United States, eventually settling in New York where, in 1933 he founded the Hans Hofmann School of Fine Arts at 137 East Fifty-seventh Street. Hans Hofmann taught and mentored such key figures as Helen Frankenthaler, Louise Nevelson, Lee Krasner and Larry Rivers. His theories on colour and space and early forays in automatic drip paintings had a direct influence on such artists as Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning and Mark Rothko. His first one man exhibition in New York was held at Peggy Guggenheim’s Art of This Century Gallery in 1944.