Clara Westhoff


Clara Westhoff, also known as Clara Rilke or Clara Rilke-Westhoff was a German sculptor and the wife of poet Rainer Maria Rilke.
At 17, Westhoff went to Munich, where she attended a private art school. In 1898 she moved to Worpswede and learned sculpture with Fritz Mackensen. She befriended Paula Becker a painter there. She continued her studies in 1899 with Carl Seffner and Max Klinger in Leipzig and, in 1900, with Auguste Rodin in Paris, also attending the Académie Colarossi.
In 1901 she married the poet Rainer Maria Rilke in Worpswede. Eighteen years later, she moved to Fischerhude with her daughter, Ruth Rilke. Her home there with a studio later became the "Café Rilke", which still exists today.
By 1925 Westhoff had turned to painting so that, in addition to her sculptural work, she created an equally substantial body of work in painting. Soon after her death, as with many women in the arts in the 1950s, she fell into oblivion. Her work was privately owned or barely accessible to the public in various collections. With her comprehensive biography in 1986, Marina Sauer initiated a rehabilitation of the artist by freeing Clara Rilke-Westhoff from the shadowy existence of being seen only as the wife of Rilke and as a friend of Paula Modersohn-Becker. Clara Rilke-Westhoff can today be seen as a pioneer among women sculptors in Germany.