Following the war, she pursued an independent career as a painter until 1930, specializing in portraits. She also made drawings and at least one etching. When her brother Frank died in 1939, she took over management of his company. In 1949, during the
Berlin Blockade, she was the victim of a brutal robbery by the Gladow gang led by
Werner Gladow. She never entirely recovered her health after this. After World War II, her work was exhibited more widely and consistently. She earned an honorable mention at the
2nd Exhibition of European Painters in the United States (1969) and was appointed an honorary member of the Academy of Arts in Rome. She died in Berlin in 1972 and later on a solo exhibition was mounted in Berlin in 1981. ==References==