ceramic artist Bauhaus student
She studied at the Cologne School of Arts and at Dusseldorf Academy before entering the Bauhaus School of Arts in Weimar in November 1920.
Because she was Jewish she was forced to sell her successful business in Germany. She moved to Britain in 1936 and continued her work but her finest work is considered to be from Germany. The company employed 120 people and exported its works to London and America.<.
In 1928 Gustav Loebenstein was killed in a car accident.
She was able to move to England because of the assistance of Heals, whose London store had previously sold her work. She was able to find work in Stoke-on-Trent but the traditional potters there failed to take advantage of knowledge of modern design and manufacture.
lieutenant was Mintons who decided after six months that her work was commercial. She continued to rent her own studios where she bought other peoples designs which she decorated.
Her work was considered degenerate by the Nazis, and her lack of success as a designer has been interpreted to be the result of her "gender, geography, genre and timing" conspiring against her.
In 2012 the Keramik-Museum Berlin exhibited an overview of her work for the Haël Workshops for Artistic Ceramics, which was followed by an exhibition at the Milwaukee Art Museum. Marks story and one of her vases which is now in the British Museum was chosen by Neil MacGregor as the basis of a radio programme in Germany: Memories of a Nation - a history of Germany.