In 1938, a young Eva Hesse fled Germany, eventually arriving in New York in 1939. Hesse began her art education at the School of Industrial Art and later graduated from Yale University, where she studied under the artist Josef Albers and was influenced by Abstract Expressionism. Hesse employed a variety of sculptural materials—including resin, fiberglass, rope, latex, and rubber tubing—to create organic forms charged with psychological and bodily presence. Rising to prominence in the 1960s alongside other artists affiliated with Postminimalism, Hesse became one of the most singular and influential artists of the postwar period.
–From the Glenstone Field Guide