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Angelika Hoerle

Angelika Hoerle (née Margaretha Angelika Fick; 20 November 1899 – 9 September 1923) was a German Dada artist who was a founding member of the Cologne art group Stupid and the cofounder of a Dadaist publishing house.

Angelika Hoerle
Born
Margaretha Angelika Fick

(1899-11-20)20 November 1899
Died9 September 1923(1923-09-09) (aged 23)
Cologne, Germany
NationalityGerman
Known forPainting
MovementDada
Spouse
Heinrich Hoerle
(m. 1919)

Life edit

Margaretha Angelika Fick was born 20 November 1899 in Cologne, Germany as the youngest of cabinetmaker Richard Fick and Anna (Kraft) Fick's four children. Her sibling Willy Fick (1893–1967), while apprenticed as a cabinet maker, took evening and weekend courses at the Koelner Kunstgewerbeschule where he met artists Heinrich Hoerle, Franz Wilhelm Seiwert, Anton Raederscheidt and Marta Hegemann. Angelika was introduced to these artists and their friend Max Ernst, through Willy.

Fascinated by art, especially by women in art like Hegemann, Angelika sketched and visited exhibitions during her apprenticeship in millinery. She saw the works of artist/designer Marie Laurencin and sculptor Milly Steger at the Sonderbund Exhibition in Cologne in 1912. At the Deutsche Werkbund Exhibition in Cologne in 1914 she saw more works by female creators in the House of Women where there were sculptures, batik fabrics, wall hangings, rugs and linoleum designs by women.[1]

Angelika drew nearer Seiwert's friends Kaethe and Oskar Jatho during World War I when the Jatho home became a gathering point for anti-war activists. Heinrich Hoerle and Willy Fick were registered as conscientious objectors and as such did not take up war service until 1917—Fick as a wagon driver and Hoerle as a telephonist. In June 1919 Angelika eloped with Heinrich Hoerle against her parents’ wishes. For a honeymoon the couple went to Simonskall in the Eifel Mountains where the Jatho family and Seiwert established the artists’ colony called Kalltalgemeinschaft. Jatho dedicated her poem Gemeinschaft[2] to Angelika Hoerle. That same year the couple was involved in pre-dada disruptive activities that included distributing Der Ventilator, a leftist journal at factory gates and illegally placarding buildings with art, such as a proof print of Heinrich Hoerle's Krueppelmappe.[3]

Angelika and Heinrich Hoerle established a "dadaheim", a term used by the Cologne press for their apartment,[4] but, there were multiple interconnected "dadaheims" in Cologne. Marta Hegemann, had married Anton Raederscheidt and art historian Luise Straus,[5] had married artist Max Ernst in 1918 and their homes were also focal points for anti-establishment activities. By 1921 Angelika Hoerle showed symptoms of tuberculosis, aggravated by the couple's poverty. They lived without heat in winter and hustled wallpaper and men's tie designs to industrial clients[6] to afford food. Angelika was very ill by 1922 when her husband abandoned her, fearing the disease which had killed his father and from which his sister Marie died in 1924. In an unpublished novella, EntArtet, MAF Raderscheidt (Marta Hegemann's granddaughter) and Stephan Everling paint the word picture of Angelika playing her harmonica to stave off loneliness as she walked from the Raderscheidts’ atelier/home on Hildeboldplatz to her lonely garret in Lindenthal. Willy Fick and the Raederscheidts supported her but Angelika died on 9 September 1923—at 23.

Art career at 19 edit

Angelika Hoerle's art career officially began in 1919 with the publication of Lebendige, a folder of six woodcuts that depicted murdered revolutionaries. She worked with artists Seiwert and Raederscheidt and architect Peter Abelen who considered the young artist well-versed enough in the international politics of the day to take on the task of creating prints for Jean Jaures and Eugen Levine. In the September 1919 issue of Sozialistische Republik she followed Lebendige with a cartoon that parodied Cologne's police chief and showed her knowledge of local politics. Angelika affiliated herself with Karl Nierendorf and his newly created Gesellschaft der Kuenste (GdK),[7] but, despite the GdK's stated intentions to revolutionize art, Angelika took part in the dada secession from the 1919 GdK exhibition at the Cologne Kunstverein. The splinter exhibition, called Section D, issued a catalogue, Bulletin D that showed her, Heinrich Hoerle, Seiwert, Max Ernst and Raederscheidt as participants.

Art career in the Stupid group and as a publisher edit

In February 1920 the Graphisches Kabinet von Bergh & Co in Duesseldorf exhibited the Section D works, thus providing it with some heft, and Angelika co-founded the Stupid group with her brother Willy, the Raederscheidts and Seiwert. She showed works at their ongoing Hildeboldplatz exhibitions in 1920 and 1921 and participated in Stupid Verlag publications.[8] Simultaneously, she co-founded Schloemilch Verlag with her husband and it published Max Ernst's folder of prints called Fiat modes, pereat ars (Let there be fashion, down with art)[9] which echoed elements that Angelika used in her own drawings.[10] Schloemilch Verlag/ ABK also published Heinrich Hoerle's Krueppelmappe of twelve lithographs showing war "cripples". Most significantly, Schloemilch, with Angelika as co-publisher, produced Die Schammade, a sophisticated international dada publication. Angelika's ironic works Roehren and Reiterin were prominently placed in Schammade.

Worker actions edit

Dada and politics mixed again when Stupid helped organize a dada evening at the Monarch Hotel in Aachen.[11] The Cologne connection to Aachen came through the union movement, FAUD (Freie Arbeiter Union Deutschland) and its offshoot, Linksradikale Jugend Aachen, of which Seiwert was a member. Raderscheidt and Hoerle were documented[12] at the Monarch fracas. Angelika as a trade union advocate, friend to Raederscheidt and as Hoerle's partner would have been there as well. Angelika's two ironic pencil drawings, Hotelboy und Mann I and II poke fun at the hotel staff that was flummoxed by the brouhaha that ensued when the nonsensical activities began. Following up with their interest focused on workers, Angelika and Heinrich listed themselves as the co-chairs for the Cologne Subcommittee of the German-wide Artists’ Committee for Starving Artists in Russia. Their plea for support was printed in Die Sozialistische Republik of December 1922.

Proto-surrealism edit

By 1922 Angelika was alone and too ill to participate in art or political activities; she turned to drawing contemplative works and dream-scapes. The works that American Collector Katherine Dreier bought from the Karl Nierendorf Gallery in 1922 were proto-surrealistic and captured her isolation.[13]

Influence edit

Angelika's death at 23 touched many. Artists Max Ernst, Jankel Adler, Gottfried Brockmann, Marta Hegemann and Anton Raderscheidt commemorated her in art. Angelika Hoerle's works are in the collections of the Art Gallery of Ontario, Canada; the Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany; the Gerd Arntz Archive in the Hague, Netherlands, the Rhenish Archive for Artists’ Legacies, Bonn, Germany and in the Societe Anonyme Collection at New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.A. Her art has been in exhibitions in ten countries on three continents. She has inspired playwrights, poets, composers, novelists and art historians who continue to write about her.

In popular culture edit

  • Juhan Puhm, Angelika (Drawing Woman 1920), a play, the Performance House, Barrie, Ontario, 1988
  • Angelika Littlefield, Angelika's Promise: a monologue play, Jackman Hall, Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, 2009
  • Gunther Limburg. Heinrich und Angelika. Painting 2009. Cologne, Germany
  • Ennio A. Paola, Comets and Shadows: a musical score, 2009. Novelist Ute Bales played Comets & Shadows with her readings in Künstlerhaus Schloss Balmoral (Bad Ems), Cabaret Voltaire (Zurich) and Simonskall, Germany. In February 2019 the piece premiered in a version for string quartet aboard Oceania, Marina, Bora, Bora, South Seas, Pacific Ocean with Quadrivium Quartet (Poland)
  • David Annwn."Z206 For Angelika Hoerle", poem in Bela Fawr’s Cabaret, 2008. Annwn is an Anglo-Welsh poet and author.
  • Ute Bales, Die Welt zerschlagen: Die Geschichte der Dada-Künstlerin Angelika Hoerle, a novel in German, 2016
  • Ennio Paola, composer, The World Is Smashed | The World Is Shattered

Exhibitions during her lifetime edit

  • Kaltall Gemeinschaft, Simonskall, Eifel, Germany, June 1919
  • Section D, Gesellschaft der Kuenste, Koelnischer Kunstverein, Cologne, 1919
  • Gruppe Stupid, Hildeboldplatz, Cologne, ongoing 1919-1920
  • Halbmonatsaustellung, Graphischen Kabinett Van den Berg & Co, Duesseldorf, 1920
  • Erste Internationale Kunstaustellung Duesseldorf (Internationaler Kongress Fortschrittlicher Kuenstler), Tietz Department Store, May–June 1922
  • Karl Nierendorf Neue Kunst Galerie, Cologne, 1922
  • Unter Eigner Jury, Koelnischer Kunstverein, Cologne, October 1922
  • Erste Allgemeine Deustsche Kunstausstellung der IAH (International Workers’ Aid Association) Moscow, St. Petersburg, Saratov, October 1922 (Angelika was dead at the time of the openings but took part in the preparation for this exhibition.)

Exhibitions after Angelika Hoerle’s death edit

  • Yale Societe Anonyme, Duesseldorf and Amsterdam, 1958–59
  • Yale Societe Anonyme, St. Anselm's, New Hampshire, 1975
  • Vom Dadamax zum Gruenguertel: Koeln in den 20er Jahren, Cologne Kunstverein, Cologne, 1975
  • Dada and Surrealism Reviewed, Arts Council of Great Britain, London, U.K., 1975; also in Centre Pompidou, Paris, France, July–November 1978 and Berlin, Germany, 1978
  • L’Altra Meta Dell’Avanguardia 1910-1940, Comune di Milano, Italy, Feb-May,1980; also in Rome 1980 and Stockholm, 1980-1981
  • Angelika Hoerle 1899 - 1923, Koelnischer Kunstverein, Germany, 1981-1982
  • The World According to Dada, Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Taipei, 1988
  • The Dada Period in Cologne, Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, Canada, 1988-1989
  • The Societe Anonyme: Modernism for America, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles 2006, Phillips Collection, Washington D.C. 2006–2007, Dallas Museum of Art, 2007
  • Experiment Kalltalgemeinschaft 1919-1921, Simonskall, Germany, 2008
  • Angelika Hoerle: the comet of cologne dada, Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, Canada 2009; Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany, 2009
  • The Societe Anonyme: Modernism for America, Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Conn. 2012-2013
  • Die Dada La Dada She Dada, Forum Schlossplatz, Aarau, Switzerland, 2014-2015

References edit

  1. ^ Littlefield, Angelika (2009). angelika hoerle: the comet of cologne dada. Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario. p. 15.
  2. ^ Herzogenrath, Wulf (1981). Heinrich Hoerle. Cologne: Rheinland-Verlag. p. 297.
  3. ^ Littlefield, Angelika. angelika hoerle: the comet of cologne dada. Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario. p. 27.
  4. ^ Littlefield, Angelika (1988). The Dada Period in Cologne. Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario. p. 34.
  5. ^ Spies, W. Luise Straus: Eine Frau blickt sich an. pp. 164–165.
  6. ^ Littlefield, Angelika (2009). angelika hoerle: the comet of cologne dada. Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario. p. 28.
  7. ^ Mues, Jenny (2018). Kunstvereine als Vermittlungsinstanzen der Moderne in der Zeit der Weimarer Republik. Munich: Ludwig Maximilian University Munich. pp. 167–168.
  8. ^ Foster, Stephen (1988). The World According to Dada. Taipei: Taipei Fine Arts Museum. p. 118.
  9. ^ Reisenfeld, R. "Max Ernst: Fiat modes pereat ars" (PDF). MoMa.
  10. ^ Littlefield, Angelika (2009). angelika hoerle: the comet of cologne dada. Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario. pp. 53–78.
  11. ^ Webster, Gwendolen. "Dada Aachen". The Kurt Schwitters Society Newsletter. p. 7.
  12. ^ Juergen, Schaefer (1993). Dada Koeln. Wiesbaden: Deutsches Universitaets Verlag. pp. 75, footnote 22.
  13. ^ Artinger, Kai (1999). Etwas Wasser in der Seife: Portraits dadaistischer Kuenstlerinnen und Schriftsteller. Berlin: Aviva Verlag. pp. 49–66.

Further reading edit

  • https://www.fembio.org/biographie.php/frau/biographie/angelika-hoerle/
  • https://ago.ca/events/family-secrets-inside-view-short-life-angelika-hoerle

angelika, hoerle, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, september, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, message, née, ma. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Angelika Hoerle nee Margaretha Angelika Fick 20 November 1899 9 September 1923 was a German Dada artist who was a founding member of the Cologne art group Stupid and the cofounder of a Dadaist publishing house Angelika HoerleBornMargaretha Angelika Fick 1899 11 20 20 November 1899Cologne German EmpireDied9 September 1923 1923 09 09 aged 23 Cologne GermanyNationalityGermanKnown forPaintingMovementDadaSpouseHeinrich Hoerle m 1919 wbr Contents 1 Life 2 Art career at 19 3 Art career in the Stupid group and as a publisher 4 Worker actions 5 Proto surrealism 6 Influence 7 In popular culture 8 Exhibitions during her lifetime 9 Exhibitions after Angelika Hoerle s death 10 References 11 Further readingLife editMargaretha Angelika Fick was born 20 November 1899 in Cologne Germany as the youngest of cabinetmaker Richard Fick and Anna Kraft Fick s four children Her sibling Willy Fick 1893 1967 while apprenticed as a cabinet maker took evening and weekend courses at the Koelner Kunstgewerbeschule where he met artists Heinrich Hoerle Franz Wilhelm Seiwert Anton Raederscheidt and Marta Hegemann Angelika was introduced to these artists and their friend Max Ernst through Willy Fascinated by art especially by women in art like Hegemann Angelika sketched and visited exhibitions during her apprenticeship in millinery She saw the works of artist designer Marie Laurencin and sculptor Milly Steger at the Sonderbund Exhibition in Cologne in 1912 At the Deutsche Werkbund Exhibition in Cologne in 1914 she saw more works by female creators in the House of Women where there were sculptures batik fabrics wall hangings rugs and linoleum designs by women 1 Angelika drew nearer Seiwert s friends Kaethe and Oskar Jatho during World War I when the Jatho home became a gathering point for anti war activists Heinrich Hoerle and Willy Fick were registered as conscientious objectors and as such did not take up war service until 1917 Fick as a wagon driver and Hoerle as a telephonist In June 1919 Angelika eloped with Heinrich Hoerle against her parents wishes For a honeymoon the couple went to Simonskall in the Eifel Mountains where the Jatho family and Seiwert established the artists colony called Kalltalgemeinschaft Jatho dedicated her poem Gemeinschaft 2 to Angelika Hoerle That same year the couple was involved in pre dada disruptive activities that included distributing Der Ventilator a leftist journal at factory gates and illegally placarding buildings with art such as a proof print of Heinrich Hoerle s Krueppelmappe 3 Angelika and Heinrich Hoerle established a dadaheim a term used by the Cologne press for their apartment 4 but there were multiple interconnected dadaheims in Cologne Marta Hegemann had married Anton Raederscheidt and art historian Luise Straus 5 had married artist Max Ernst in 1918 and their homes were also focal points for anti establishment activities By 1921 Angelika Hoerle showed symptoms of tuberculosis aggravated by the couple s poverty They lived without heat in winter and hustled wallpaper and men s tie designs to industrial clients 6 to afford food Angelika was very ill by 1922 when her husband abandoned her fearing the disease which had killed his father and from which his sister Marie died in 1924 In an unpublished novella EntArtet MAF Raderscheidt Marta Hegemann s granddaughter and Stephan Everling paint the word picture of Angelika playing her harmonica to stave off loneliness as she walked from the Raderscheidts atelier home on Hildeboldplatz to her lonely garret in Lindenthal Willy Fick and the Raederscheidts supported her but Angelika died on 9 September 1923 at 23 Art career at 19 editAngelika Hoerle s art career officially began in 1919 with the publication of Lebendige a folder of six woodcuts that depicted murdered revolutionaries She worked with artists Seiwert and Raederscheidt and architect Peter Abelen who considered the young artist well versed enough in the international politics of the day to take on the task of creating prints for Jean Jaures and Eugen Levine In the September 1919 issue of Sozialistische Republik she followed Lebendige with a cartoon that parodied Cologne s police chief and showed her knowledge of local politics Angelika affiliated herself with Karl Nierendorf and his newly created Gesellschaft der Kuenste GdK 7 but despite the GdK s stated intentions to revolutionize art Angelika took part in the dada secession from the 1919 GdK exhibition at the Cologne Kunstverein The splinter exhibition called Section D issued a catalogue Bulletin D that showed her Heinrich Hoerle Seiwert Max Ernst and Raederscheidt as participants Art career in the Stupid group and as a publisher editIn February 1920 the Graphisches Kabinet von Bergh amp Co in Duesseldorf exhibited the Section D works thus providing it with some heft and Angelika co founded the Stupid group with her brother Willy the Raederscheidts and Seiwert She showed works at their ongoing Hildeboldplatz exhibitions in 1920 and 1921 and participated in Stupid Verlag publications 8 Simultaneously she co founded Schloemilch Verlag with her husband and it published Max Ernst s folder of prints called Fiat modes pereat ars Let there be fashion down with art 9 which echoed elements that Angelika used in her own drawings 10 Schloemilch Verlag ABK also published Heinrich Hoerle s Krueppelmappe of twelve lithographs showing war cripples Most significantly Schloemilch with Angelika as co publisher produced Die Schammade a sophisticated international dada publication Angelika s ironic works Roehren and Reiterin were prominently placed in Schammade Worker actions editDada and politics mixed again when Stupid helped organize a dada evening at the Monarch Hotel in Aachen 11 The Cologne connection to Aachen came through the union movement FAUD Freie Arbeiter Union Deutschland and its offshoot Linksradikale Jugend Aachen of which Seiwert was a member Raderscheidt and Hoerle were documented 12 at the Monarch fracas Angelika as a trade union advocate friend to Raederscheidt and as Hoerle s partner would have been there as well Angelika s two ironic pencil drawings Hotelboy und Mann I and II poke fun at the hotel staff that was flummoxed by the brouhaha that ensued when the nonsensical activities began Following up with their interest focused on workers Angelika and Heinrich listed themselves as the co chairs for the Cologne Subcommittee of the German wide Artists Committee for Starving Artists in Russia Their plea for support was printed in Die Sozialistische Republik of December 1922 Proto surrealism editBy 1922 Angelika was alone and too ill to participate in art or political activities she turned to drawing contemplative works and dream scapes The works that American Collector Katherine Dreier bought from the Karl Nierendorf Gallery in 1922 were proto surrealistic and captured her isolation 13 Influence editAngelika s death at 23 touched many Artists Max Ernst Jankel Adler Gottfried Brockmann Marta Hegemann and Anton Raderscheidt commemorated her in art Angelika Hoerle s works are in the collections of the Art Gallery of Ontario Canada the Museum Ludwig Cologne Germany the Gerd Arntz Archive in the Hague Netherlands the Rhenish Archive for Artists Legacies Bonn Germany and in the Societe Anonyme Collection at New Haven Connecticut U S A Her art has been in exhibitions in ten countries on three continents She has inspired playwrights poets composers novelists and art historians who continue to write about her In popular culture editJuhan Puhm Angelika Drawing Woman 1920 a play the Performance House Barrie Ontario 1988 Angelika Littlefield Angelika s Promise a monologue play Jackman Hall Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto 2009 Gunther Limburg Heinrich und Angelika Painting 2009 Cologne Germany Ennio A Paola Comets and Shadows a musical score 2009 Novelist Ute Bales played Comets amp Shadows with her readings in Kunstlerhaus Schloss Balmoral Bad Ems Cabaret Voltaire Zurich and Simonskall Germany In February 2019 the piece premiered in a version for string quartet aboard Oceania Marina Bora Bora South Seas Pacific Ocean with Quadrivium Quartet Poland David Annwn Z206 For Angelika Hoerle poem in Bela Fawr s Cabaret 2008 Annwn is an Anglo Welsh poet and author Ute Bales Die Welt zerschlagen Die Geschichte der Dada Kunstlerin Angelika Hoerle a novel in German 2016 Ennio Paola composer The World Is Smashed The World Is ShatteredExhibitions during her lifetime editKaltall Gemeinschaft Simonskall Eifel Germany June 1919 Section D Gesellschaft der Kuenste Koelnischer Kunstverein Cologne 1919 Gruppe Stupid Hildeboldplatz Cologne ongoing 1919 1920 Halbmonatsaustellung Graphischen Kabinett Van den Berg amp Co Duesseldorf 1920 Erste Internationale Kunstaustellung Duesseldorf Internationaler Kongress Fortschrittlicher Kuenstler Tietz Department Store May June 1922 Karl Nierendorf Neue Kunst Galerie Cologne 1922 Unter Eigner Jury Koelnischer Kunstverein Cologne October 1922 Erste Allgemeine Deustsche Kunstausstellung der IAH International Workers Aid Association Moscow St Petersburg Saratov October 1922 Angelika was dead at the time of the openings but took part in the preparation for this exhibition Exhibitions after Angelika Hoerle s death editYale Societe Anonyme Duesseldorf and Amsterdam 1958 59 Yale Societe Anonyme St Anselm s New Hampshire 1975 Vom Dadamax zum Gruenguertel Koeln in den 20er Jahren Cologne Kunstverein Cologne 1975 Dada and Surrealism Reviewed Arts Council of Great Britain London U K 1975 also in Centre Pompidou Paris France July November 1978 and Berlin Germany 1978 L Altra Meta Dell Avanguardia 1910 1940 Comune di Milano Italy Feb May 1980 also in Rome 1980 and Stockholm 1980 1981 Angelika Hoerle 1899 1923 Koelnischer Kunstverein Germany 1981 1982 The World According to Dada Taipei Fine Arts Museum Taipei 1988 The Dada Period in Cologne Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto Canada 1988 1989 The Societe Anonyme Modernism for America Hammer Museum Los Angeles 2006 Phillips Collection Washington D C 2006 2007 Dallas Museum of Art 2007 Experiment Kalltalgemeinschaft 1919 1921 Simonskall Germany 2008 Angelika Hoerle the comet of cologne dada Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto Canada 2009 Museum Ludwig Cologne Germany 2009 The Societe Anonyme Modernism for America Yale University Art Gallery New Haven Conn 2012 2013 Die Dada La Dada She Dada Forum Schlossplatz Aarau Switzerland 2014 2015References edit Littlefield Angelika 2009 angelika hoerle the comet of cologne dada Toronto Art Gallery of Ontario p 15 Herzogenrath Wulf 1981 Heinrich Hoerle Cologne Rheinland Verlag p 297 Littlefield Angelika angelika hoerle the comet of cologne dada Toronto Art Gallery of Ontario p 27 Littlefield Angelika 1988 The Dada Period in Cologne Toronto Art Gallery of Ontario p 34 Spies W Luise Straus Eine Frau blickt sich an pp 164 165 Littlefield Angelika 2009 angelika hoerle the comet of cologne dada Toronto Art Gallery of Ontario p 28 Mues Jenny 2018 Kunstvereine als Vermittlungsinstanzen der Moderne in der Zeit der Weimarer Republik Munich Ludwig Maximilian University Munich pp 167 168 Foster Stephen 1988 The World According to Dada Taipei Taipei Fine Arts Museum p 118 Reisenfeld R Max Ernst Fiat modes pereat ars PDF MoMa Littlefield Angelika 2009 angelika hoerle the comet of cologne dada Toronto Art Gallery of Ontario pp 53 78 Webster Gwendolen Dada Aachen The Kurt Schwitters Society Newsletter p 7 Juergen Schaefer 1993 Dada Koeln Wiesbaden Deutsches Universitaets Verlag pp 75 footnote 22 Artinger Kai 1999 Etwas Wasser in der Seife Portraits dadaistischer Kuenstlerinnen und Schriftsteller Berlin Aviva Verlag pp 49 66 Further reading edithttps www fembio org biographie php frau biographie angelika hoerle https ago ca events family secrets inside view short life angelika hoerle Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Angelika Hoerle amp oldid 1217591655, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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