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#otto wagner
recherchestetique · 3 months
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Art Nouveau elevator from 1898 in Otto Wagner’s ‘Majolika House’, Vienna, Austria.
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fotobyandre · 2 months
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Ernst Fuchs Villa built by Otto Wagner, Vienna
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nuveau-deco · 7 months
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Design for the Angel Window in the Otto Wagner Church at Steinhof. Dated 1905, artist is Koloman Moser (Vienna, 1868–1918), medium is gouache and black india ink on paper. From the Leopold Museum, Vienna, Inv. 5270
(Source: onlinecollection.leopoldmuseum.org)
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allesgold · 7 months
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wien 2023
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guy60660 · 10 months
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Otto Wagner | Villa Wagner II
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Elevator in Vienna designed by Otto Wagner in 1898 - AUSTRIA
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sprint95 · 6 months
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wien 2023
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krakrava · 2 months
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x-heesy · 1 year
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Otto Wagner Villa, 1140 vienna Austria 🇦🇹
Otto Koloman Wagner (German: [ˈɔto ˈkoːloman ˈvaːɡnɐ] (listen); 13 July 1841 – 11 April 1918) was an Austrian architect, furniture designer and urban planner. He was a leading member of the Vienna Secession movement of architecture, founded in 1897, and the broader Art Nouveau movement. Many of his works are found in his native city of Vienna, and illustrate the rapid evolution of architecture during the period. His early works were inspired by classical architecture. By mid-1890s, he had already designed several buildings in what became known as the Vienna Secession style. Beginning in 1898, with his designs of Vienna Metro stations, his style became floral and Art Nouveau, with decoration by Koloman Moser. His later works, 1906 until his death in 1918, had geometric forms and minimal ornament, clearly expressing their function. They are considered predecessors to modern architecture.
The Second Wagner Villa (1912)
Another of his last projects was the Second Wagner Villa on Hüttelbergstrasse in Vienna. It was located near to, and in sight of, his first villa, which he had sold in 1911. It was considerably smaller than his earlier villa. The building was designed to be extremely simple and functional, with a maximum of light, and a maximum use of new materials, including reinforced concrete, asphalt, glass mosaics, and aluminum. The villa is in the form of a cube, with white plaster walls. The primary decoration elements of the exterior are bands of blue glass tile in geometric patterns. The front door is reached by a monumental stairway to the first floor. The servant's quarters were downstairs, and the main floor was occupied by a large single room, which served as a salon or dining room. For the furniture, he selected many works designed and manufactured by one of his former students, Marcel Kammerer. Wagner intended the house as the main residence of his wife after his death, but she died before him, and he sold the house in September 1916
Wagner died on April 11. 1918, shortly before the end of the First World War, in his apartment on Döblergasse in Vienna.
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Soundtrack: 2000 Elefanten by Die Wilde Jagd
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fashionbooksmilano · 1 year
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Art Nouveau
Keiichi Tahara
Philippe Thiébaut, Bruno Girveau
Editions Assouline, Paris 2000,  399 pages, 15 x 21 x 4, ISBN  978-2843231933
euro 50,00
email if you want to buy [email protected]
Au cours du dernier tiers du XIXe siècle, l'Europe connut un profond renouvellement du paysage urbain de ses capitales et du cadre de vie de ses habitants. Architectes et décorateurs étaient animés du désir de faire table rase des formules pastichant les styles historiques et de créer un environnement qui satisfasse les exigences de la vie contemporaine et les besoins de " l'homme moderne ". De cette quête de formes fonctionnelles et inédites est né l'Art nouveau. Bien que son existence ait été de brève durée (1895-1910) et bon nombre de ses créations volontairement détruites, il demeure encore des témoignages à travers l'Europe de son étonnante vitalité, de sa poursuite d'un idéal organique, qu'il s'agisse de recherches individuelles (Horta, Guimard, Gaudi) ou collectives (Ecole de Glasgow, Wiener Werkstätte). Cet ouvrage les présente, saisis par l'objectif de Keiichi Tahara, dans la diversité de leur langage plastique et formel, combinant de manière unique rationalisme et onirisme.
14/05/23
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ineedtoseeimages · 4 months
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Fashion x Architecture
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Prada fw20 x lc2 (1928) by Perriand and Corbusier
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Prada fw20 x Majolika (1898) by Otto Wagner
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cosmonautroger · 2 years
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fotobyandre · 2 months
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Vienna - österreichische Postsparkasse built in 1904-1906, Otto Wagner
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recherchestetique · 10 months
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Otto Wagner, Postal Savings Bank, Vienna, 1906-9.
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lynxmuse · 9 months
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Otto Wagner’s Stadtbahn stations in Vienna.
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housesofbudapest · 1 year
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Vienna, Austria
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