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Mariska Karasz

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Nationality
  
Hungarian-American

Name
  
Mariska Karasz

Role
  
Author


Mariska Karasz MARISKA KARASZ CANDY PING PONG

Born
  
1898
Budapest, Hungary

Occupation
  
Fashion designer Author Artist

Died
  
1960, Danbury, Connecticut, United States

Books
  
Adventures in Stitches and More Adventures - Fewer Stitches, How to Make Growing Clothes for Your Baby

Mariska Karasz (1898, Budapest, Hungary — August 27, 1960, Danbury, Connecticut) was an American fashion designer, author, and textile artist. She had a passion for fashion design and created colorful, patterned garments largely inspired by the folk art of her native country. Her abstract wall hangings mixing fibers such as silk, cotton, wool, and hemp with horsehair and wood garnered her extensive national, and even international, attention. Critics repeatedly praised her for her skillful and unusual use of color, her creative combinations of materials, and her inspiring efforts to promote a modern approach to embroidery.

Contents

Mariska Karasz httpssmediacacheak0pinimgcom236x7070a7

Biography

Mariska Karasz Mariska Karasz Home

Karasz learned to sew as a young girl in Hungary. She immigrated to New York City in 1914 at the age of sixteen. Karasz was the younger sister of industrial designer and New Yorker cover artist Ilonka Karasz. She taught herself embroidery, utilizing her family, animals, and the natural world surrounding her studio in Brewster, New York, as subject matter. As her talent developed, her pieces became increasingly abstract and refined.

Mariska Karasz Embroidery Color Range II

Mariska soon established a successful career as a fashion designer. Her foreign background and new American identity defined her custom clothing for women in the 1920s, which combined Hungarian folk elements with a modern American style.

Mariska Karasz Mariska Karasz Embroidery Calla Lily Embroidery

In the early 1930s, after her marriage to Donald Peterson and the births of her two daughters, Solveig and Rosamond, Karasz began designing modern children's clothing, which was admired by parents, scholars, and critics for its practicality and originality. Her career in fashion ended in the early 1940s, following a studio fire and the entry of the United States into World War II.

Mariska Karasz Mariska Karasz Fashion designer and artist

Mariska Karasz died in 1960, aged 62 years.

Artistic career

In 1947, during the rise of American studio craft and abstract expressionism, Karasz began creating embroidered wall hangings. She exhibited her work in museums and galleries across the county, in over 50 solo shows during the 1950s.

She also authored the book Adventures in Stitches in 1949 (republished in an expanded version in 1959), an influential book on creative needlework, and served as guest needlework editor for House Beautiful from 1952-1953.

The first retrospective of her work took place at the Georgia Museum of Art from January 20 to April 15, 2007. In 2010 her work was included in the exhibition "Textiles Recycled/Reimagined" at the Baltimore Museum of Art.

Publications

  • Karasz, Mariska (1943). See and Sew: A picture book of sewing (First ed.). New York: J.B. Lippincott Company. 
  • Karasz, Mariska (1946). Design and Sew (First ed.). United States: J.B. Lippincott Company. 
  • Karasz, Mariska (1949). Adventures in Stitches : a new art of embroidery (First ed.). New York: Funk & Wagnalls Co. 
  • Callahan, Ashley (2007). Modern Threads: Fashion and Art by Mariska Karasz. Athens, Georgia: Georgia Museum of Art. ISBN 9780915977611. 
  • References

    Mariska Karasz Wikipedia