Among her most interesting works are those created with Japanese woodcutting tools which her husband, the museum curator Justus Brinckmann, brought to Hamburg.
[1][3] Hahn-Brinckmann's work consisted mainly of portraits in the Realistic style she had learnt during her studies.
[1] Among her most notable works are her Japanese-inspired woodcut prints with up to six colours which she painted in the late 1890s.
Hahn-Brinckmann created them using woodcut tools from Japan, specially imported by Justus Brinkmann.
[3] Four examples of her Japanese-style woodcuts can be seen at the Vejen Art Museum in the south of Jutland.