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Gabriele Münter (19 February 1877 –19 May 1962) was a German expressionist painter who was at the forefront of the Munich avant-garde in the early 20th century. Life and work Gabriele Münter was born in Berlin and showed an interest in art from a young age. She received private tuition in drawing and attended the local Women Artists' School, as she was unable to enroll in the German art academies because she was female. Münter left Berlin to attend the progressive Phalanx School in Munich. There she studied sculpture, printmaking and painting and in 1902 began a very intimate and personal relationship with the School director Wassily Kandinsky; they were later engaged to be married. In 1911 they founded the avant-garde expressionist group known as Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider) group with Franz Marc. During World War I the couple left Germany to take refuge in Switzerland, but since Kandinsky was Russian he was forced to return to Moscow in 1914. He divorced his estranged wife, his cousin, Anja Chimiakin, and remarried while in Russia and never saw Münter again. She returned to Germany following the war but was relatively inactive in the arts again until after 1928 and the development of a relationship with Johannes Eichner. In 1931 she moved back to her house in Murnau with Eichner. During World War II she hid Kandinsky's works and those of other members of the Blue Rider from the Nazis. She died on 19 May 1962 in Murnau am Staffelsee. References * National Museum of Women in the Arts. Gabriele Münter
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