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Born and educated in Germany, Walter Gropius (1883-1969) belongs to the select group of architects that massively influenced the international development of modern architecture.
Walter Gropius (1883-1969) set out to build for the future. As the founding director of the Bauhaus, the Berlin-born architect had an inestimable influence on our aesthetic environment, championing a bold new hybrid of light, geometry, and industrial design, as dazzling today as it was a century ago. In this essential architect introduction, we survey Gropius' evolution and influence with 20 of his most significant projects, from the Bauhaus Building in Dessau, Germany, to the Chicago Tribune Tower and Harvard University Graduate Center, completed after Gropius's exodus to the United States in 1937. We explore his role both as an architectural practitioner, and as a writer and educator, not only as a Bauhaus pioneer, but also, along with Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, as a leading proponent of the International Style. Along the way, we see how many of Gropius's tenets remain benchmarks for architects, designers, and urbanists today. Whether in his emphasis on a functional beauty or his interest in housing and city planning, Gropius astounds in the agility of his thinking as much as in the luminous precision of his work.
Walter Gropius (1883-1969) set out to build for the future. As the founding director of the Bauhaus, the Berlin-born architect had an inestimable influence on our aesthetic environment, championing a bold new hybrid of light, geometry, and industrial design, as dazzling today as it was a century ago. In this essential architect introduction, we survey Gropius' evolution and influence with 20 of his most significant projects, from the Bauhaus Building in Dessau, Germany, to the Chicago Tribune Tower and Harvard University Graduate Center, completed after Gropius's exodus to the United States in 1937. We explore his role both as an architectural practitioner, and as a writer and educator, not only as a Bauhaus pioneer, but also, along with Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, as a leading proponent of the International Style. Along the way, we see how many of Gropius's tenets remain benchmarks for architects, designers, and urbanists today. Whether in his emphasis on a functional beauty or his interest in housing and city planning, Gropius astounds in the agility of his thinking as much as in the luminous precision of his work.
2013 wurde infolge einer Beschlagnahme der "Schwabinger Kunstfund" in den Blick der Weltöffentlichkeit katapultiert und damit der Kunsthändler Hildebrand Gurlitt (1895-1956), bei dessen Sohn Cornelius (1935-2014) sich die Werke befunden hatten. Eine Taskforce wurde gegründet, um die Herkunft der Werke aufzuklären, welche man wegen Gurlitts Tätigkeit während des Nationalsozialismus als "Raubkunst" verdächtigte. 2014 tauchten weitere Werke aus dem Besitz Gurlitts auf. Im Fokus der Provenienzrecherche zum Kunstfund stand stets die zügige Aufklärung der Herkunft einzelner Werke, nicht jedoch die Grundlagenforschung. Im Zuge der komplexen Recherchen und des Umgangs mit dem heterogenen schriftlichen Nachlass ergaben sich jedoch zahlreiche weiterführende und für die Provenienzforschung wichtige Erkenntnisse, die hier in einer Auswahl vorgestellt werden.
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