Marek Szwarc was born in
Zgierz,
Poland, on 9 May 1892, the youngest of ten sons. His eldest brother was Polish-Portuguese mining engineer and historian
Samuel Schwarz. During the
First World War Szwarc returned to Poland. In 1919 he met and married his wife, Guina, a writer, and together they returned to Paris after the war. Until the
Second World War, Szwarc lived in Paris and his paintings and sculptures were bought by collectors in Germany, Poland, the United States, and by several museums. It was during this period between the wars that he produced some of his most outstanding and original work in hammered copper, exhibited in the
Salon des Tuileries and the subject of a monograph by the celebrated art critic
Louis Vauxcelles. Vauxcelles writes of Szwarc: "By virtue of its poetic concepts, by its firm and generous execution, by the sense of its cadenced dispositions, by the sharp graphics written in view of the material and which commands this very material, it is apparent that Marek Szwarc is in harmony with the most audacious innovators of our times, who seek him out and see him as a maître".In 1922 to 1923 Szwarc contributed to the Berlin and Warsaw based avant-garde Yiddish Journal
Albatros (אלבאַטראָס), edited by poet and publicist
Uri Zvi Greenberg. Szwarc participated in the important 1922 Düsseldorf Congress of the International Union of Progressive Artists, where signed its founding proclamation alongside
Jankel Adler, and
Stanislaw Kubicki, as representatives of the Polish Avant-Garde. Szwarc exhibited in numerous leading galleries, including
Israel Ber Neumann's New Art Circle Gallery in New York, in 1926,
Fritz Gurlitt in Berlin, Lilla Gallery, Stockholm, and
Ludwig Schames in Frankfurt. In 1929, the distinguished critic and novelist
Ludwig Lewinsohn described Szwarc as an "interesting phenomenon in the history of civilization" writing that his "profound and instinctive Jewishness will in the long run broaden and not narrow the appeal of his arresting and vital work". ==Later years==