Hesse didn’t like the thought of art hanging on a wall, but the look of it in the open space of air. She, like any other artist, puts her moods or feelings into her works. In Hesse's work she shows a lot of poetic type art, like the world we view around. She also shows depression and illness that she feels during her hard time struggling with cancer. Later on in New York City, Hesse decided to incorporate materials found around her into her works. She used objects like rubber, latex, or old cords. Then with these objects Hesse would use a technique used by woman artists and wrap, wind, or thread them into her art. This was a new type of art that was called abstract expressionist, which is what Hesse did for the rest of her career. Image
Hesse shows us to never take life for granted! Even though her life was short, it was fulfilled. She explored what she could do in her life before it was over. Hesse shows this because she had a young age, and an unexpected death. Although, after Hesse's death her name still lives with us. She inspired many other artists by the way she displayed her art. Some artists that were inspired by Hesse consist of Kiki Smith and Rachel Whiteread. One of the places Hesse's art is being displayed is at San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. View her art there to see how her life and art came