The Reluctant Artist

Pauline Wong
Pauline Wong • 9 min read

Growing up with a mother who has always painted, lawyer Nicholas Hanna never thought much of the paint pots strewn around the house, or the paintings that covered the walls of his home. A serendipitous incident that saw one of Dorle Lindner’s paintings being sold to a client began his journey to bring her talent to the world.

SINGAPORE (JAN 17): It was 1965, and young artist Dorle Lindner was bored. Her fine arts education at Munich’s prestigious Academy of Fine Arts held no more surprises for her — it was too rigid, too regimented. She was tired of painting pictures like ‘A Man Walking with His Umbrella in the Rain.’ “Bored stiff,” was how she put it.

In 1966, six weeks after she was enrolled into the academy, she packed her bags, quit school, and set off for New York. She had heard of the rise of abstract impressionism there and wanted to learn more about the movement. Her father was absolutely furious. Kurt Lindner was a wealthy industrialist who had survived the ravages of war-time Berlin to rebuild the family fortune, and his daughter’s behaviour was totally unbecoming of a young lady from a well-heeled family. Incensed that Dorle had quit the academy, Kurt refused to support her in any way, thinking that without money she would quickly return to Germany and art school. Yet Dorle not only persisted, but thrived in New York. She got a day job as a mail clerk at the famous Plaza Hotel, and spent her free time visiting museums and learning English.

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