Maria Antonia Merkelbach

Her father was Jacobus Merkelbach (1877–1942), a photographer, and her mother was Josephine Maria Wilhelmina Harmsen (1881–1969); she was the eldest daughter among their four children.After the learning process, she joined her father's firm in 1924, and initially started work of developing the negatives, enlargements, printing, and retouching of photographs.[2][3] Her work with her father on a regular basis resulted in large portrait photography in Vienna and Berlin-style Atelier Merkelbach, which expanded their customer base which consisted of theater artists, authors, commissioners, politicians, businessmen and rich people of Amsterdam.However, her husband Rosenboom was incarcerated on charges of espionage by the Germans, in the Landsberg am Lech prison for two years from 1941 to 1943.She even took pictures for issuing false passports, which put her in a state of tension and fear of being caught as the German soldiers used to frequent her studios.
Portrait of Mies by Jacob Merkelbach (1924)
State Portrait of Queen Wilhelmina taken in 1948 in the Studio J. Merkelbach
AmsterdamJacob MerkelbachQueen WilhelminaLeidsepleinViennaBerlinBandungDutch East IndiesWorld War IIanti-aircraftglass negativesTheatre MuseumLeiden UniversityDeutsches MuseumToon HermansHildo KropCissy van Bennekom