From 1928 to 1930 Hofmann studied at the
Bauhaus in Dessau, where he learned from
Paul Klee and
Wassily Kandinsky. In 1930, the Bauhaus set up its own exhibition for his works and in the same year he was invited by the Jenaer Kunstverein for the Young Artists from the Bauhaus Dessau exhibition. When the
National Socialists took power, his work was banned as degenerate and he fled to
Switzerland and
Paris as a member of the
KPD. In 1934 he worked for Paul Klee in
Bern. In 1935 he returned to Germany, married Hanna Stirnemann and lived in seclusion in Hainichen near Dornburg, where the couple worked closely with the
ceramist Otto Lindig. In 1939 Hofmann was drafted into
military service and sent to the
Eastern Front. In 1945 he was taken prisoner by the Soviets. After his release he moved to
Rudolstadt in
Thuringia in 1946, where he resumed his artistic activity. Since his work was not appreciated in the
GDR either, he moved to
West Berlin in 1950, where he received the
Berlin Art Prize in 1953 and then lived as an artist in Paris from 1953 to 1965. Between 1966 and 1975 Hofmann taught at the Academy of Fine Arts in Berlin. From 1976 he lived and worked in
Pompeiana until his death. The exhibition The Poetics of the Bauhaus in the
Palazzo Ducale in Genoa divides his life's work into four phases:
Das Bauhaus und die Jahre der Zensur,
Russland,
Das geteilte Deutschland und die europäischen Aufenthalte sowie
Pompeiana. ==References==