Alexej von Jawlensky
Russian, 1864–1941
Jawlensky settled in Wiesbaden in 1921, the year of a successful exhibition arranged in that city by Galka Scheyer. In 1922 he married Hélène Nesnakomoff, and began a professional collaboration with their son Andreas. Crippled by arthritis by 1929, Jawlensky sought relief in Bad Wörishofen and developed new, small-format "meditations" which he alternated with large-format still lifes of flowers. In 1933 Jawlensky was forbidden by the National Socialists to exhibit his work in Germany. His paintings in public collections were confiscated in 1937 and two were included in Hitler's Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art) exhibition held in Munich. After 1938 Jawlensky was completely paralyzed; he died on 15 March 1941 in Wiesbaden.
For a detailed biography, see Armin Zweite, ed., Alexej Jawlensky 1864-1941 (exh. cat., Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, Munich, 1983), pp. 14-23.