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Gropius (Hardcover)
Gilbert Lupfer & Paul Sigel, Taschen; Edited by Peter Goessel
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R470
R397
Discovery Miles 3 970
Save R73 (16%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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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. About the series Born back in 1985,
the Basic Art Series has evolved into the best-selling art book
collection ever published. Each book in TASCHEN's Basic
Architecture series features: an introduction to the life and work
of the architect the major works in chronological order information
about the clients, architectural preconditions as well as
construction problems and resolutions a list of all the selected
works and a map indicating the locations of the best and most
famous buildings approximately 120 illustrations (photographs,
sketches, drafts, and plans)
Not only Adolf Hitler and Hermann Goering utilized the occupation
of France during the Second World War to procure artworks for their
collections - German museums also made acquisitions at the time.
The advantageous foreign exchange rate and the large range of
artworks, for instance, from seized Jewish property, afforded
favorable opportunities. French museums like the Louvre also
expanded their holdings during this time. Many purchases by German
museums were restituted to France in the postwar period, while some
have remained in the collections until today and are first now
becoming a focus of research. The essays in the volume from German
and French perspectives analyze the similarities and differences in
the activities of museums on the French art market during the
occupation for the first time. Adolf Hitler et Hermann Goering ne
sont pas les seuls a avoir profite de l'Occupation de la France par
l'Allemagne pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale pour acquerir des
oeuvres d'art pour leurs collections - les musees allemands y ont
egalement fait des acquisitions. Le taux de change avantageux et
l'offre importante d'oeuvres d'art provenant par exemple de
proprietes juives spoliees ont offert des opportunites favorables.
Les musees francais, comme le Louvre, ont egalement elargi leurs
collections a cette epoque. De nombreuses acquisitions de musees
allemands ont ete restituees a la France dans l'apres-guerre, mais
certaines sont restees dans les collections jusqu'a ce jour et
n'ont attire l'attention des chercheurs que recemment. Les
contributions de ce volume analysent pour la premiere fois, des
points de vue francais et allemand, les points communs et les
differences entre les activites des musees sur le marche de l'art
francais pendant l'Occupation.
Despite efforts by a reunited Germany to regulate "pending property
issues", cultural heritage institutions are still having to address
questions of museum ethics: Is it right that nationalized property
dating from 1945-1990 forms part of public collections? What kinds
of dispossessions took place? Who were those involved? When and
under what circumstances did the objects make their way into public
collections? From where? These questions are of cross-border
interest. Confiscated private collections and items of uncertain
origin from the "Museumsfonds der DDR" (East Germany's museum
stock), were exchanged for foreign currency on the international
art market. One of the functions of the German Lost Art Foundation
is to investigate the confiscations of cultural goods in the Soviet
Occupation Zone and East Germany, an area of research it has been
facilitating since 2017.
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