From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
| Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
|
[[Category:21st-century Hungarian engravers]] |
[[Category:21st-century Hungarian engravers]] |
||
|
[[Category:Hungarian women engravers]] |
[[Category:Hungarian women engravers]] |
||
|
[[Category:20th-century Hungarian engravers]] |
|||
|
[[Category:21st-century Hungarian sculptors]] |
[[Category:21st-century Hungarian sculptors]] |
||
|
[[Category:21st-century Hungarian women sculptors]] |
[[Category:21st-century Hungarian women sculptors]] |
||
Revision as of 22:12, 9 November 2025
American sculptor (born 1933)
Marika Somogyi (born 1933) is a Hungarian-born American sculptor.
Biography
Somogyi was born in 1933, in Budapest, Kingdom of Hungary, into a rich Jewish family. She attended a private elementary school until World War II, when she hid in a Catholic convent to avoid capture by the Nazis.[1] Her family was reunited at the end of the war, but her father was arrested soon after. She married at age 17, to a man named László. During the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, she and her husband fled Hungary and moved to the United States.[2]

Somogyi studied at the Hungarian University of Fine Arts before moving to the United States. There, she studied at the University of California, under Robert Arneson and attended classes alongside Arnaldo Pomodoro. She later was a lecturer at Pennsylvania State University.[3]
Somogyi was commissioned to design the 1991 and 2001 commemorative silver dollars. The coins are permanently displayed at the British Museum, the Smithsonian Institution, the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, and the Stockholm Palace, among other places.[3]
Awards and honors
References



