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Hermann Fechenbach was born in Württemberg in 1897 and grew up in Bad Mergentheim, where his parents ran an inn that was a hub for the local Jewish community. From a young age, Fechenbach showed a keen interest in drawing and often used it as an escape from his struggles with school and difficulty relating to others due to his sensitive and shy temperament.
Despite his lackluster academic performance, Fechenbach's talent for art was recognized by his tutor, who visited his family home to praise his potential. However, Fechenbach's parents, who valued commerce above all else, were not comforted by this praise and saw no future for their son in the arts. Instead, Fechenbach left school early and received training in window dressing through family connections with clothing retailers.
In 1916, Fechenbach was conscripted and initially felt patriotic. However, in August 1917, he survived a grenade attack that left him with serious injuries to both legs. He was eventually transported to a front-line hospital where his left leg had to be amputated, leading to a change of heart from his father who dropped his opposition to Fechenbach becoming an artist.
Fechenbach's formal art education began in 1918 at a Stuttgart handicraft school for invalids, followed by training at the academies in Stuttgart and Munich for three years, where he learned painting and restoration techniques under the influence of Max Liebermann. He then spent time in Florence, Pisa, Venice, Vienna, and Amsterdam, where he produced a series of miniature wood engravings to illustrate the stories of Genesis.
In 1924, Fechenbach returned to Stuttgart and began painting in the contemporary style of "Die Neue Sachlichkeit". He regularly exhibited his work at the "Kunstgebaute", a showcase for serious artists of the time, every spring and autumn.
In 1926, Hermann Fechenbach's professional status as a "Kunstmaler und Grafiker" was recognized by Berlin. His self-portrait, known as "the blue boy," was displayed in various German towns and still remains in his possession. Nearly all of his other works from this time were sold after exhibitions.
In collaboration with an architect friend, he built a bungalow in Hohenheim in 1926, a non-Jewish area now a suburb of Stuttgart. Hermann alternated between living in his country bungalow and his town studio, creating portraits for sale or trade and wood engravings for his own enjoyment.
In 1930, he married Greta Batze, a professional photographer, and together they had a studio in Stuttgart where they taught art to a group of twelve students.
However, in 1933, the Nazi regime removed his name from the official state register and banned him from exhibiting.
By spending most of his time in his bungalow, away from the Jewish quarter, the Fechenbachs avoided being registered by the Nazis for several years. Nevertheless, they were shunned and mistreated by their non-Jewish neighbors. Hermann made regular visits to friends in the city to teach them practical skills, assuming they too would need to flee Germany. His focus was on protection and survival.
Ultimately, the Nazi persecution forced the Fechenbachs to flee their homeland. They spent three months in Palestine in 1938 but found the political and physical environment unsustainable. In January 1939, Greta arrived in England with no money, working as a domestic servant in Petts Wood and searching for a guarantor for her husband. Hermann arrived in May of the same year. They moved to Blackheath a few months later, where Hermann resumed his painting and engraving as a means of making a living. He managed to raise enough money to get his parents out of Germany to join his brothers in South America but was unable to save his twin sister, Rosa, who died in a Nazi concentration camp.
In 1940, Hermann was interned in Bury as a suspect alien. He protested his treatment by starting a hunger strike, and as a result, he was moved to a prison in Liverpool. From there, he was transferred to the Isle of Man, and arrangements were made for Greta to be accommodated near the detention center. While interned, he began working on "Refugee Impressions," a series of lino cuts (as no wood was available). This series features powerful imagery of Nazi leaders, concentration camps, and internment scenes and is considered the most impactful of his artistic life.
Upon his release from internment in 1941, the Fechenbachs were sponsored by Dr. Bela Horovitz, an Austrian art publisher who introduced them to Professor Tancred Borenius. They were offered lodging with a family in Oxford, and Hermann had his first public exhibition in many years at a small gallery in Oxford in 1942. A second exhibition of oils, pencil drawings, colored lino cuts, and woodcuts was held later in the year and was opened by the mayor of Oxford to critical acclaim.
The Anglo-Palestinian club in Piccadilly held the first London exhibition of Hermann Fechenbach's work in 1944. During this period, there were two exhibitions at the Ben Uri Art gallery. In 1948, a second exhibition was opened by a member of the Rothschild family and several members of Parliament, which was a great success.
The Fechenbachs moved to a studio flat in Colet Gardens, London in 1944, where they held open exhibitions each spring at the Embankment from 1946 to 1951. Hermann was deterred from continuing to keep in the public eye due to several factors. As a German refugee artist, he used media and styles which were not popular in London at that period. Additionally, being a cripple with no readily available help to transport canvases made it considerably challenging to set up an exhibition. Hermann's shy and retiring nature, poor communicative skills, difficulty with a foreign language, and unwillingness to follow fashions made it more attractive to continue working in isolation. He found commissions and craftwork, such as antique porcelain restoration, to be an adequate source of income.
The Fechenbachs moved to Denham, Buckinghamshire, in 1962. Hermann published the Genesis story in a hardback volume containing 137 prints in 1969. He started to research the fate of the entire Jewish Community of Bad Mergentheim during the period of the Second World War, liaising with Dr. Paul Sauer and Professor Max Miller, historians and theologians. In 1972, Köhlhammer published his partly autobiographical book, "The Last Jews of Mergentheim."
During the 1970s, Greta suffered from a progressive illness, and Hermann nursed her in spite of his own physical disabilities. She eventually died in 1982, which placed even more constraints on Hermann's contact with the outside world. In 1984, he married Mary Burne. Hermann died on 6th September 1986 at Upton Hospital, Slough, England.