Hilde Goldschmidt was born into a Jewish family in Leipzig, Germany in 1897 and trained in book design at the Academies of Fine Arts in both Leipzig and Dresden; at the latter she also joined Oskar Kokoschka's painting classes between 1920 and 1923. Upon his departure, the class was dissolved, and Goldschmidt left for New York, holding an exhibition at the New Gallery in the same year. Returning to Europe in 1926, she studied in Paris before travelling to the South of France, where she remained until 1929, then moved to Italy, where she settled in Capri. She later returned to Germany and held her first large exhibition in December 1932 at the Galerie Caspari, Munich.

 

In 1933, following Hitler's accession to the Chancellorship, Goldschmidt was forced to flee Germany and, inspired by the Tyrolean landscape, settled in Kitzbühel, Austria, exhibiting at the Galerie Wuerthle, Vienna in 1934. Unable to return to Germany 'for political reasons', she moved to England with her mother in the spring of 1939, earning her living by 'handicrafts', until following a meeting with Kokoschka in 1941 in Cornwall, she resumed painting. In 1942 she settled in the Lake District, where she was moved by 'the grandeur of the scenery', and began a friendship with the refugee artist and 'Merz' collagist Kurt Schwitters, part of the Langdale group which included the philosopher Olaf Stapledon and the dancer Rudolf von Laban. She remained there until 1949. In the autumn of that year her Lake District work was exhibited in Manchester. In 1950 she returned to Austria and settled finally in her house and studio in Kitzbühel, holding exhibitions in Munich and Basel, and receiving an honorary Professorship from the Austrian President. After 1954 she taught at Kokoschka's Summer School for Seeing in Salzburg. Her first solo London exhibition was with Ben Uri in 1959 and she also showed with émigrée gallerist Annely Juda in 1969, and at Abbot Hall Art Gallery (and tour) in 1973. She died in Kitzbühel in 1980. Her work is held in UK collections including Abbot Hall in the Lake District and Tate. Hilde Goldschmidt's niece, ceramicist Brigitte Goldschmidt (later known as Brigitte Appleby), later formed Briglin pottery with Eileen Lewenstein.