Márta Lacza


Márta Lacza is a Hungarian graphic artist and portrait painter.
She was born in the Csepel district of Budapest in 1946. In 1967, she graduated from Fine Arts High School and then studied from 1970 to 1974 at the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts under Simon Sarkantyú and Károly Raszler. Since then, she has had numerous solo exhibitions at home and abroad, and her works have been shown in London, Hamburg, Eindhoven, Ghent, Copenhagen and Athens.
She was awarded a Derkovits Scholarship and won the Munkácsy Prize in 1983. A 40-minute television programme about her, titled A Tv galériája. Lacza Márta grafikusművész, was broadcast on Magyar Televízió, the Hungarian national public broadcaster, in March 1982.
She took part in the first "Frans Masereel Rijkscentrum voor graphite" international graphic artists' colony in Belgium, and was called back every year for fourteen years. She also participated in the work of Atelier Nord in Norway.
She is known for her oil paintings, drawings in pencil or chalk, etchings and illustrations for many books. Her work is described as combining mood, thought creativity and personal vision with "unmatched skill and preparedness coupled with outstanding craftmanship". Her paintings show "mysterious, sometimes almost bizarre figures" that "provoke emotion from observers."
Her illustrations have been published in a number of books, including the Hungarian translation of the Anne of Green Gables series of children's books by Lucy Maud Montgomery translated by Katalin Szűr-Szabó, and books of Hungarian folktales such as The Silver King's Flute by Zsigmond Móricz, and The Tree That Reached the Sky. She and her husband also illustrated academic volumes such as Hajdú-Bihar megye 10-11. századi sírleletei, and The late neolithic of the Tisza region .
Her autobiography, Élet és Művészet, was published in Budapest in 2007.
She and her husband, artist Dékány Ágoston, lived and worked in the Csepel district of Budapest.

Solo exhibitions

Her solo exhibitions include:
Works acquired by the Janus Pannonius Múzeum:
Other works include: