Ben Uri Research Unit

for the study and digital recording of the Jewish, Refugee and wide Immigrant contribution to British visual culture since 1900.


Margarete 'Grete' Marks artist

Margarete Marks (née Heymann) was born to a wealthy Jewish family in Cologne, Germany in 1899 and completed her studies at the Weimar Bauhaus, before establishing a successful ceramics factory with her first husband, Gustav Loebenstein, in 1923. Following his death in 1928, Marks ran the factory until 1934, when the Nazi regime imposed a forced sale. Marks left for Britain in 1936, helped by connections to Heal's store in London, and although she initially worked in Stoke-on-Trent for Minton Pottery, her latter career in London focussed on painting, drawing, mosaics and lithography.

Born: 1899 Cologne, Germany

Died: 1990 London, England

Year of Migration to the UK: 1936

Other name/s: Margarete Heymann, Margarete Heymann-Löbenstein (Loebenstein), Margarete Heymann-Marks, Grete Marks, Margaret Marks


Biography

Ceramicist and painter Margarete Marks (née Heymann) was born on 10 August 1899 to a wealthy Jewish family in Cologne, Germany. Her daughter, Frances, has described her life in exile in England as 'an upper class German woman living in working class London' (Camden New Journal, 5 April 2007). She studied painting at the College of Applied Arts (Kunstgewerbeschule) in Cologne and the Academy of Fine Arts (Akademie der Bildenden Künste) in Düsseldorf, before joining Johannes Itten’s progressive preliminary course at the Weimar Bauhaus in 1920. The following year she was accepted onto a trial term at the ceramics workshop directed by Gerhard Marcks, while also attending courses taught by Georg Muche, Paul Klee and Gertrud Grunow. Although Marks left the Bauhaus early, in autumn 1921, in somewhat unclear circumstances, its teachings had a lasting impact on her work, enabling her to absorb and synthesise various strands of modernism, and to retain a particular interest in geometric form and colour. In 1923, together with her husband, Gustav Loebenstein, Marks founded the Haël Workshops for artistic ceramics in Marwitz, near Berlin, from which her distinctive designs were exported to prestigious clients in America and the UK, including Heal's and Liberty stores in London, thus bringing Bauhaus modernism into the British domestic sphere. After her husband's death in a car accident in 1928, Marks continued to run the business until 1934, when the Nazis forced her – as a Jew – to sell the factory (which had employed over 100 staff at its peak) at a price far below market value, to a member of the party. Her own works were labelled 'degenerate' by the regime, and featured in the Nazi propaganda publication Der Angriff in 1934, juxtaposed against ceramics produced by Nazi-approved Hedwig Bollhagen, who had taken over the factory.

Marks subsequently travelled to Palestine, visiting potteries in Jerusalem, as part of an unsuccessful attempt to relocate her business, before immigrating to Britain in 1936, helped by connections to the export manager at Heal's store in London. Moving to Stoke-on-Trent, the centre of the UK ceramics' industry, she initially taught at Burslem School of Art (where she held a solo exhibition in 1937) and worked for the renowned Minton Pottery, where one of her own avant-garde forms was reproduced, but she was unable to recapture her earlier commercial success, faced with a more conservative British audience. The Bloomsbury Gallery, London held a solo exhibition of her work in 1938 and in July of the same year, one of her watercolour landscapes was featured in the final section ('Artists now working in England') in the Exhibition of Twentieth Century German Art, held at the New Burlington Galleries, as a riposte to the Nazi's Degenerate Art exhibition of 1937.

Following her second marriage to Harold Marks in 1938 (whose surname she adopted), Marks founded her own studio, Greta Pottery (with studio mark 'GP') which she had to close in 1940. Her daughter Frances was born in 1941. At the end of the war, Marks resumed ceramic production in her studio and studied painting, drawing and lithography at Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts, London. Postwar, Marks had one woman exhibitions at the Redfern Gallery (1954) and Roland, Browse & Delbanco (1956); she also regularly exhibited with Ben Uri, showing a range of works in its annual exhibitions (and selling art fairs) from the 1950s to the 1980s; she also held solo shows in 1953, 1960 and 1979, and a two-person show with fellow émigré, painter, Henry Sanders, in 1970, which featured ceramics, mosaics and paintings. According to her daughter, 'ceramics and painting were of equal importance throughout my mother’s life' (Morning Star, 2019). Marks also lectured on From Bauhaus to Minimal Art as part of Ben Uri's winter lecture series in 1979. Marks also produced silverware and designed two large-scale murals for office buildings in Bradford in 1960 and 1966 (the 1960 mural has been relocated and is on view at City House, Cheapside, Bradford).

Margarete Marks died in London on 11 November 1990. Posthumously, a joint exhibition with fellow émigrée, Pamina Liebert-Mahrenholz was held at the Boundary Gallery, London (2008), and a retrospective at Haël Pottery (2006), while her work has been exhibited in contemporary contexts at Ben Uri in 2005 and 2011. Marks' work is represented in UK collections, including Ben Uri Gallery and Museum, British Museum and the V&A, London; the largest collection of her ceramics in the UK is held at the Potteries Museum and Art Gallery, Stoke-on-Trent.

Related books

  • Elizabeth Otto & Patrick Rössler, Bauhaus Women: A Global Perspective (London: Herbert Press, 2019)
  • Sarah MacDougall and Rachel Dickson, Finchleystrasse: German artists in exile in Great Britain and beyond 1933–45 (London: Ben Uri Gallery and Museum in association with the German Embassy London, 2018)
  • Katie McGown, After the Break: Grete Marks and Laure Prouvost (Canterbury: University of Kent, 2016)
  • Ana Fernandez Garcia, Helena Seražin, Emilia Maria Garda, Caterina Franchini, Momowo: 100 Works in 100 Years – European Women in Architecture & Design 1918–2018 (France Stele Institute of Art History, 2016)
  • Neil MacGregor, Germany: Memories of a Nation (London: Allen Lane, 2014)
  • Ingeborg Becker and Claudia Kanowski, eds., Avantgarde für den Alltag. Jüdische Keramikerinnen in Deutschland 1919–1933. Marguerite Friedlaender-Wildenhain, Margarete Heymann-Marks, Eva Stricker-Zeisel (Berlin: Bröhan Museum, 2013)
  • Ulrike Müller, Bauhaus Women: Art, Handicraft, Design (Paris: Flammarion, 2009)
  • Sarah MacDougall and Rachel Dickson (eds.) Forced Journeys: Artists in Exile in Britain, c. 1933-45 (London: Ben Uri Gallery, 2009)
  • Andrew Casey, Art Deco Ceramics in Britain (Woodbridge: ACC Art Books, 2007)
  • Jutta Vinzent, 'List of Refugee Artists (Painters, Sculptors, and Graphic Artists) From Nazi Germany in Britain (1933–1945)', in Identity and Image: Refugee Artists from Nazi Germany in Britain (1933–1945) (Kromsdorf/Weimar: VDG Verlag, 2006) pp. 249-298
  • Andreas Heger, Keramik zum Gebrauch – Hedwig Bollhagen und die HB-Werkstätten für Keramik (Weimar: VDG Verlag, 2005)
  • Anthony Grenville, Refugees from the Third Reich in Britain (Amsterdam: Rodopi BV, 2002)
  • Ursula Hudson-Wiedemann and Judy Rudoe, 'Grete Marks, Artist Potter', The Decorative Arts Society Journal, Vol. 26, 2002, pp. 101-119
  • Jewish Artists: The Ben Uri Collection (London: Lund Humphries in association with Ben Uri Art Society, 1994)
  • Cheryl Buckley, Potters and Paintresses: Women Designers in the Pottery Industry, 1870–1955 (London: The Women's Press, 1990)
  • Margret Marks – Henry Sanders (London: Ben Uri Art Gallery,1970)
  • Map of the factory drawn by Grete Marks (1966)
  • H. E. Katz, Restitution Statement (1965)
  • H. W. K. Kügelmann, Restitution Statement (1965)
  • V&A Ceramics and Glass Collection Object Information File: Margaret Marks (1959)
  • Margaret Marks Exhibition (London: Ben Uri Art Gallery, 1953)

Public collections

Related organisations

  • Bauhaus, Weimar (student)
  • Burslem School of Art (teacher)
  • Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts (student)
  • Grete Pottery (founder)
  • Hael Workshops (co-founder)
  • Minton Pottery (employee)

Related web links

Selected exhibitions

  • Interstices: Discovering the Ben Uri Collection – Selected by René Gimpel, Ben Uri Gallery (2020)
  • Grete Marks: An Intimate Portrait, Pallant House Gallery, Chichester (2019)
  • Two Cologne-born Artists at the Bauhaus, Makk Art and Design, Cologne (2019)
  • Finchleystrasse: German Artists in Exile in Great Britain and Beyond 1933–45, Ben Uri Gallery & Museum at the German Embassy, London (2018)
  • Refugees: The Lives of Others, Ben Uri Gallery, London (2017)
  • Shaping Ceramics: From Lucie Rie to Edmund de Waal, Jewish Museum, London (2016)
  • MoMoWo 100 Works in 100 Years – European Women in Architecture & Design 1918–2018, University of Oviedo, Spain and touring (2016)
  • Grete Marks: When Modern Was Degenerate, Milwaukee Art Museum (2016)
  • Tonalities: Jewish Women Ceramicists from Germany after 1933, Jewish Museum, Berlin (2013–14)
  • Ceramics Museum Berlin: Haël-Keramik 1923–33 (2012)
  • Summer in the City: Contemporary Responses, Ben Uri Art Gallery, London (2011)
  • Forced Journeys: Artists in Exile in Britain c. 1933–45, Ben Uri Gallery and touring (2008)
  • Margarete Marks and Pamina Liebert-Mahrenholz, Boundary Gallery, London (2008)
  • Margarete Marks, Hael Pottery, Velten (2006)
  • Radical and Modest: Work, Leisure and the Everyday, Ben Uri Gallery (2005)
  • Influential Europeans, Crafts Council, London (1992)
  • Margarete Marks, Ben Uri Art Gallery, London (1979)
  • Margarete Marks – Mosaics, Paintings, Drawings, Ben Ben Uri Art Gallery, London (1960)
  • Pictures for the Home, Ben Uri Art Gallery, London (1960)
  • Annual Exhibition, Ben Uri Art Gallery, London (1958)
  • Margarete Marks, Roland, Browse & Delbanco, London (1956)
  • Margarete Marks, Redfern Gallery, London (1954)
  • Autumn Exhibition of Paintings, Sculptures and Drawings by Contemporary Jewish Artists, Ben Uri Art Gallery, London (1951)
  • Arts and Crafts (Seasonal Gifts) Bazaar, Ben Uri Art Gallery, London (1950)
  • Margarete Marks, Bloomsbury Gallery, London (1938)
  • Twentieth Century German Art, New Burlington Galleries, London (1938)
  • Burslem School of Art, Burslem (1937)