Art History 282/682, Modern Architecture

Week 3, Class 3

Glasgow and Vienna: Mackintosh, Olbrich, Wagner, Hoffmann, and Loos

The Glasgow Four, Charles Rennie Mackintosh, his wife Margaret Macdonald,

her sister Frances Macdonald, and Herbert McNair

Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Glasgow School of Art, Glasgow, Scotland, 1897-1909

Charles Rennie Mackintosh, unrealized project for a House for an Art Lover, 1900

Theophil Hansen, Design for the Ring and Inner City, Vienna, 1858

Sigmund Freud, Arnold Schönberg, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Karl Kraus, and Robert Musil

Emperor Franz Josef

Ringstrasse

Theophil Hansen, Parliament, 1874-1883

Theophil Hansen, Palais Erzherzog Wilhelm, 1864-1867

Ferdinand Hodler, Ver Sacrum or "sacred spring" poster

Künstlerhaus, or artist's organization

Joseph Maria Olbrich, Secession Building, Vienna, 1897-1898

Jugendstil or youth style, after the art magazine Jugend, meaning youth,

Sigmund Freud, The Interpretation of Dreams, 1900

Josef Maria Olbrich, Ernst-Ludwig Haus, Darmstadt, Germany, 1899-1901

Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig,

Josef Maria Olbrich, Wedding Tower and Exhibition Building, Darmstadt, Germany, 1905-1908

Peter Behrens, Behrens House, Darmstadt, Germany, 1901

Otto Wagner, Bridge at the Nussdorf Lock of the Danube Canal, Vienna, 1894-1898

Otto Wagner, Karlsplatz Metro Station, Vienna, 1896-1897

Otto Wagner, Moderne Architektur or Modern Architecture, 1895

Otto Wagner, Majolika House, Vienna, 1898-1899

Otto Wagner, Post Office Savings Bank, Vienna, 1904-1906

Josef Hoffmann, Palais Stoclet, Brussels, 1905-1911

Gustav Klimt, Fulfillment, Palais Stoclet

Oskar Kokoschka, portrait of Adolf Loos, 1909

Adolf Loos, Das Andere or The Other, subtitled "A Journal for the Introduction of Culture to Austria"

Friedrich Nietzsche

Adolf Loos, "Ornament and Crime," 1908

Adolf Loos, Apartment for Adolf Loos, Vienna, 1903

Adolf Loos, Kaerntner Bar, Vienna, 1908

Adolf Loos, Steiner House, Vienna, 1910

Adolf Loos, Scheu House, Vienna, 1912

Adolf Loos, Michaelerplatz Building, Goldman Salatsch Store, Vienna, 1910-1911