After studying at the Vienna Fine Arts Academy, Maria Lassnig (b. 1919, Carinthia, Austria, d. 2014, Vienna, Austria) spent some time living in Paris and New York. From 1970 to 1972 she studied film animation at the New York School of Visual Arts. On returning to her native Austria in 1980, she became the country’s first female professor of painting. She also taught animation during her time at the Vienna University of Applied Arts.
Maria Lassnig embraces painting, sculpture, animated film, and major graphic output. She had long kept her drawings under lock and key, and only published them in 1997 in ‘Die Feder ist die Schwester des Pinsels’ [The pen is the sister of the paintbrush], published by Hans Ulrich Obrist. Her life’s work has won her many accolades, including the Grand Austrian State Prize in 1988, the City of Zurich Roswitha Haftmann Prize, the Rubens Prize of the Town of Siegen, Germany, in 2002, the City of Frankfurt Max Beckmann Prize in 2004 and the Austrian Decoration for Science and Art in 2005, the 55th Venice Biennale Golden Lions for Lifetime Achievement in 2013.
In 1982 and 1997 Lassnig’s work was displayed at the Documenta in Kassel. Since the early 1950s, her works have appeared in solo exhibitions, including at the Kunstmuseum in Düsseldorf (1985); the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam (1994); the Centre Pompidou in Paris (1995); the Kunsthaus in Zurich (2003); the Hauser & Wirth in London (2004); the Museum Ludwig in Cologne (2009); the MoMA PS1 in New York (2014); the Kunsten Museum of Modern Art in Aalborg, Denmark (2016); the Tate Liverpool in Liverpool (2016). Her current solo exhibitions include Maria Lassnig, Museum Folkwang, Essen, Germany; Maria Lassnig: Woman Power, Palazzo Pitti at Uffizi Gallery, Florence; Maria Lassnig: The Future is Invented with Fragments from the Past, Municipal Gallery of Athens, Athens; Dialogues: Retrospective of Drawings and Watercolors, Albertina, Vienna.