HFBK mourns the loss of alumna Rebecca Horn
Rebecca Horn began studying art at the HFBK Hamburg in the summer semester of 1964, having already studied for two semesters at the Amgartstraße fashion college in the direct neighbourhood. She stated ‘free painting’ as her study goal on the enrolment form.
She pursued this goal with Professor Kai Sudeck until the summer semester of 1967, switching to the Austrian painter and representative of Fantastic Realism, Rudolf Hausner, who taught at the HFBK from 1965, for two semesters during this phase. In the further course of her studies, Rebecca Horn acquired the diverse techniques that would characterise her later artistic practice and also passed her examination as an art teacher. She studied textile design with industrial designer Margret Hildebrand in the summer semester of 1968, photography with Kilian Breier in the winter semester of 1968/69, graphics with visiting professor David Hockney in the summer of 1969 and finally metal sculpture with Jochen Hiltmann from the winter semester of 1969/70.
During this time, she suffered a tragic illness that forced her to interrupt her studies for a year: as she herself reported in interviews, she contracted poisoning while experimenting with the material polyester by inhaling the fumes, which was to affect her for a long time. Through writing and drawing, Rebecca Horn managed to break out of her isolation during her long stays in a sanatorium. Due to her illness, she was granted an extension to her studies and completed her degree with Jochen Hiltmann in the summer semester of 1971. With the support of her professors Hiltmann and Sudeck, she was awarded a DAAD scholarship for England at the end of her studies, which took her to St Martin's School of Art in London.
Her artistic formal language, which encompassed performances, kinetic sculptures, spatial installations and films in equal measure, soon gained international recognition, including an invitation to Documenta 5 in 1972, and laid the foundations for a great artistic career. Last Friday, the exceptional artist passed away at the age of 80.