Greta Loebl Explained

Greta Loebl Schreyer
Birth Name:Greta Loebl
Birth Date:July 28, 1917
Death Date:October 3, 2005
Nationality:Austrian-American
Occupation:Jewelry designer and painter

Greta Loebl Schreyer (July 28, 1917 — October 3, 2005), born Greta Loebl, was an Austrian-American, Jewish jewelry designer and painter.[1] [2] [3] She survived the Holocaust and died in New York City.[1]

Early life

Greta Loebl was born in Vienna, Austria and followed in her father's footsteps at 18 to become a master goldsmith.[1] [2] Due to the Nazi occupation of Austria, she and her future husband Oscar Schreyer left the country in September 1938.[1] While in Paris, France, they met a wealthy American who sponsored their affidavit for immigration to the U.S.[4] They stayed in Paris until their visa applications to the U.S. were approved, and they arrived in the U.S. in March 1939.[1] [4] The couple attempted to get visas for their parents but did not succeed, and their parents were all deported to concentration camps – Greta's parents to Theresienstadt, and Oscar's parents to Izbica[1] (and possibly Treblinka).[5] Greta Schreyer's mother was sent to Auschwitz after her husband's death. Oscar Schreyer's sister Nina Graboi (born Gusti Schreyer) survived the Holocaust, and immigrated to New York City with the help of Oscar and Greta.[1] [6]

Career

Greta Schreyer's jewelry design included lapel pins she created to make a living as a newly-arrived immigrant – they became an immediate fashion hit, and were advertised in Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, and Mademoiselle magazines.[3] From a goldsmith she evolved into an artist and from 1956, the year of Schreyer's first solo exhibition, until her death, her work was displayed in many solo and group exhibitions in the United States, Austria, and Czechoslovakia.[1] [2] [3] [7]

Her paintings and watercolors included symbols of her flight from peril, her dream-world, and her optimism.[3] [8] One series was of burning synagogues in Poland, reflecting the destruction of Polish Jewry by the Nazis.[2] As of her death, her work was in the permanent collections of Brandeis University Library, The Jewish Museum in New York, Museum Haaretz in Tel Aviv, Israel, and The Albertina and The Oesterreichische Galerie-Belvedere Palace in Vienna, Austria.[9]

Personal life

After Oscar Schreyer's death, Greta married her cousin, economist and Vassar College professor Eugen Loebl.[1] [10] She had two daughters, Leslie and Linda, as well as several grandchildren.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Finding Aid to the Greta Loebl Collection. Leo Baeck Institute. 6 May 2014.
  2. News: McBee. Richard. Longing For The Sacred: Lost Synagogues Of The Shoah Stained Glass Models By Felix Reisner; Paintings By Greta Schreyer. 10 July 2017 . The Jewish Press. July 21, 2004.
  3. News: Budapest-Vienna-New York: Émigré Artists Tibor Gergely and Greta Schreyer. 10 July 2017. Fairleigh Dickinson University.
  4. Book: Graboi, Nina. One Foot in the Future: A Woman's Spiritual Journey. May 1991. Aerial Press. 36. 978-0942344103.
  5. Book: Graboi, Nina. One Foot in the Future: A Woman's Spiritual Journey. May 1991. Aerial Press. 86. 978-0942344103.
  6. Book: Graboi, Nina. One Foot in the Future: A Woman's Spiritual Journey. May 1991. Aerial Press. 978-0942344103.
  7. News: Schwyzer. Elizabeth. Darkness and Light: Art That Captures the Human Experience. 10 July 2017 . Santa Barbara Independent. November 16, 2009.
  8. News: 2005-10-06. Paid Notice: Deaths SCHREYER, GRETA LOEBL (Published 2005). en-US. The New York Times. 2020-10-07. 0362-4331.
  9. News: Paid Notice: Deaths SCHREYER, GRETA LOEBL. 6 May 2014. The New York Times. October 6, 2005.
  10. News: Eugen Loebl, 80, Dies; Former Czech Official. 10 July 2017 . The New York Times. August 9, 1987.