He was born in
Magdeburg. As of 1914, Oelze attended the School of Decorative Arts in Magdeburg, where he was trained as a
lithographer until 1918. He learned nude drawing in evening classes. Among his teachers there were
Richard Winckel and
Kurt Tuch, as of 1918. From 1919 until 1921, he completed his studies at the same school as a
Stipendiat (a person receiving a scholarship). Between 1921 and 1925, he was a student at the
Bauhaus, at first in
Weimar with
Johannes Itten, and then in
Dessau, where he received a special teaching post at the Bauhaus. From 1926 until 1929, he lived in
Dresden, and participated in an exhibition of the "Dresdner Secession" there in 1929. During 1936–1937, he again lived in Switzerland and in Italy. In 1938, he moved to Germany, where he settled in the artists' colony in
Worpswede in 1939. From 1941 through 1945, he performed military service and was taken prisoner. After the
war, he again went to Worpswede, where he worked until 1962, and then moved to
Gut Posteholz near
Hameln. Oelze participated in
documenta II in 1959 and in
documenta III in 1964 in
Kassel. In 1965, he became a member of the
Academy of Arts, Berlin. He died in Gut Posteholz on November 26, 1980. ==Work==