Marta Worringer (January 16, 1881 – October 27, 1965) was a German Expressionist artist known for her haunting images of women.
When she returned to Cologne, she moved into a residential community with the artists Emmy Worringer and Olga Oppenheimer.
[1] In 1907, she married Emmy's brother, the art historian Wilhelm Worringer; they had three daughters whose care fell largely to Marta.
[1] After World War I, she turned towards the movement known as Das Junge Rheinland (The Young Rhinelanders), which rejected academicism in art.
She also sold some embroidery designs and illustrated some books, including an edition of Heinrich Kleist's story The Marquise of O.