Hans Moller (born March 5, 1905 – October 19, 2000) was a German-born American artist who worked mostly in an abstract format and is primarily considered to have been a colorist.
From 1919 until 1927, Moller was an instructor at the Kunstgewerbeschule Wuppertal-Barmen, an arts and crafts learning institution in the town in which he resided and worked as a bricklayer.
In 1936, he emigrated to the United States from Germany to protect his Jewish wife, Helen Rosenblum who he married in 1933, from the Nazis.
Moller created paintings in a multiplicity of styles, including expressionism, abstractionism, surrealism, cubism, pointillism, and fauvism.
Moller was known foremost as a colorist, once saying, "I only want to wake up every day and decide what colors to paint my sky.