Background
She was born February 15, 1914 in Chomutov, Austro-Hungarian Empire, (today Czechoslovakian Republic).
She was born February 15, 1914 in Chomutov, Austro-Hungarian Empire, (today Czechoslovakian Republic).
In 1931, she moved to Prague, and in 1931, she graduated from the Women"s College of Prague.
The daughter eventually became an art historian specializing in Japanese art, and, at the age of 56, Marian began her printmaking career by making woodcuts and linocuts. Her honors included a full membership in Shuyōkai (1984) and an associate membership in Kokugakai (1985). She died in Tokyo on February 24, 1987.
Her first prints were representational, often with Japanese themes.
By 1974, some were completely abstract, and by 1982, the majority were abstract. Her catalogue raisonné lists a total of 206 prints.
Although etching, in all its variations, remained Marian Korn"s favorite technique, she is known for her mastery of, and combined use of, many different methodologies. During her career, she used, either singly or in combination, woodcuts, linocuts, collagraphy, photo-etching, paper embossing, silk-screen, sugar lift, the Hayter method (viscosity printing), and carborundum printmaking.
Harvard University Art Museums, the Honolulu Museum of Art, the National Museum of Art of Romania (Bucharest, Romania), the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, the Setagaya Art Museum (Tokyo), the Tikotin Museum of Japanese Art (Haifa, Israel), and the Petit Format de Papier Collection of the City of Couvin, Belgium, are among the public collections holding prints by Marian Korn.