Education
He studied at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts, and was a member of the Association of German Artists.
He studied at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts, and was a member of the Association of German Artists.
Nonnenmacher served in the German Army during World War I and sustained some hearing loss. They lived and worked in Berlin at Potsdamer Str. 29, the former studio of Lyonel Feininger.
Hermann and Erna"s art was classified as degenerate by the Nazis, and much of his public sculpture was destroyed.
Erna was persecuted as a Jew and they emigrated to London in 1938. During the second world war Hermann and Erna were interned on the Isle of Manitoba, where Hermann made and exhibited artwork.
After the war they set up a studio in a house off Archway Road, London. Nonnenmacher died in London in August 1988.
Public collections
Nonnenmacher"s 1928 sculpture "Abschied" (Farewell) is on display in the Berlinische Galerie Berlin.
Solo and two-person exhibitions
Geffrye Museum
Heal"s Mansard Gallery
Barclay Gallery, London (1953) Terra Cotta and Pottery Figurines by Audrey Blackman. Wood carvings by H. Nonnenmacher
King"s College, London (1973) Retrospective exhibition Hermann Nonnenmacher sculptures and drawings
Group exhibitions
Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts Annual Exhibition, six times during 1940-1954
Lambeth Palace great hall, Modern Church Art (1951). Nonnenmacher exhibited a statue of Job.
Royal Academy of Arts, London
Leicester Galleries, London
Royal British Society of Sculptors
Camden Arts Centre Art in Exile in Great Britain 1933-1945 (1968)
Most or all of this work was destroyed.
Public commissions in England included sculpture for:
Church of Saint John, Waterloo, London
Boulton and Paul Limited. Norwich
Merton College, Oxford
Chapel of Kings College London, two carved wooden sculptures
The prominent Berlin-born Australian sculptor, Inge King studied under Nonnenmacher during 1936-1937 in preparation for her entry to the Berlin Academy of Arts.
From 1949 to 1970 Nonnenmacher taught modelling and pottery at Morley College. Nonnenmacher also taught private pupils in his home studio.
Before the rise of Nazism, Nonnenmacher was a well-known sculptor whose works adorned many public buildings in Germany. Nonnenmacher was awarded several commissions for public sculpture in Germany before the rise of Nazism.