In September 1935, Goetz met Christine Boumeester at the
Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Christine was a very shy Dutch painter from
Java, Indonesia. Goetz invited her to visit his studio, and she moved in with him several days later. They were married when Christine's parents visited them in Paris. He credited Christine with much of his early development from
realism to his more modern surrealist painting style. Around this time he met
Hans Hartung, who introduced him to his circle of friends. Through this, he met
Fernand Léger and
Wassily Kandinsky.
World War II As World War II began, both Goetz and his wife worked with the
French Resistance. They printed leaflets on a simple
printing press and created posters to paste on walls around Paris. However, they primarily worked to forge
identity documents. In 1939, Goetz,
Christian Dotremont, and
Raoul Ubac created
La Main à Plume, the first surrealist publication under the Occupation. The group made false documents for a Czech poet who, upon being caught by the German authorities, told them of the surrealists who would be meeting in a few days. The group was arrested, although Goetz was not among them. However, Ubec was arrested, and the authorities found a note from Goetz detailing instructions on forging identity cards. For this, as well as for Goetz's American nationality, he and Christine were forced to flee to
Côte d'Azur. They moved to
Cannes, where Goetz was forced to take on such jobs as cutting sandstone. After the
Liberation of Paris in 1944, Goetz and his wife were able to return. In 1968, Christine became ill. She lived with her illness for three years, before dying in Paris on January 10, 1971. After her death, he came across a number of her journals, which he published in a book called ''Christine Boumeester's notebooks''. He prefaced the book. After being hospitalized for an illness, Goetz committed suicide by jumping from the fifth floor of the hospital, dying in
Nice, France on August 12, 1989. ==Education==