Margit Anna

Margit Anna (left) with her painter husband Imre Amos in the 1930s

Margit Anna born Margit Sichermann (1913–1991) was a twentieth century Hungarian painter.

She attended Vaszary's school from 1932–1936 and she travelled to Paris with her husband, Imre Ámos, also a painter in 1937. There they met Chagall and his influence can be seen in her early work.

Anna's early period was similar to Imre Ámos's art with lyric presentation with grotesque elements which characterize her paintings.

Following the death of her husband in a Nazi concentration camp in 1944 her style became harsher and more elemental and from 1945–1948, a new motif appeared in her pictures of puppets symbolizing man exposed to history.

After 1949, she could not take part in art life for a long time but she began to paint again in the mid-1960s. Her pictures symbolized suppressed tragedy such as Pleasure Ride, (1967), and innocence Tale (1964) with surreal and expressive metamorphoses of the puppet motif.

She died in 1991.

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