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Mies van der
Rohe
Born in Germany and trained in the family stonemason business,
the architecture and design of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
(1886-1969) became iconic of the cool, minimalist International
Style from the first half of the century. Mies went to
Berlin to study architecture at the Vocational Arts College,
and started working in the offices of Bruno Paul in 1905.
In 1908 he began working Peter Behrens' offices, where
Mies' modernist contemporaries, Le Corbusier and Walter
Gropius had also gotten their starts. In 1914, he set
up his own architecture office in Berlin.
A member of the "Novembergruppe," an organization
intent on expanding the scope and impact of modernism,
Mies spent the first part of the 1920's designing buildings
in this style. In 1927 the design and patent for his tubular
steel cantilevered chair started to bring him into the
international spotlight. Called the "MR20,"
and created in collaboration with architect and designer
Lilly Reich, the chair was a simple, curved structure
with a woven cane seat made in versions with and without
armrests. The character of this chair, and that of many
of Mies' other designs, was that of a formal, refined
comfort. The seat and back would give slightly, under
the user's weight, but the outward appearance replaced
the cozy qualities of a large upholstered armchair with
a smaller and more streamlined chair. In 1929 he and Reich
created the German Pavilion for the Barcelona International
Exhibition, a comprehensive and enduring example of the
International Style, destroyed after the exhibition but
later rebuilt in homage. Mies' "Barcelona" chair
was a result of this project, an object made for the Spanish
royalty's inaugural ceremony which was to take place in
the pavilion. His inspiration for this piece came from
an Egyptian folding chair long thought to be a symbol
of power, and a folding stool from Roman times. He created
the "Barcelona" chair as a 'modern throne' with
a curved "X" base and a rich upholstered seat
attached by leather straps. In America George Nelson championed
this design in magazines. The piece, originally made by
hand, was later marketed for mass production by Knoll.
The popular "Brno" chair followed, circa 1930,
designed, along with the "Tugendhat," for Fritz
and Grete Tugendhat's house in the Czech Republic. Both
chairs utilized the cantilever design, but the "Brno"
had a taut upholstered seat and back and was made in a
tubular steel version and in a flat steel version. The
"Tugendhat" had a much thicker leather covered
seat and back. The house itself was made with materials
like onyx marble and ebony for the walls, and divided
and expanded the interior space with enormous picture
windows and understated partitions. Mies would bring this
modernist architectural style to the United States in
the late 1940's with the Farnsworth House in Illinois.
Both of these houses were designed to establish a visual
harmony between the exterior and the interior, the walls
of windows making the house, in effect, part of the landscape.
Mies was director of the Bauhaus school in Berlin from
1930-32, and moved to Chicago in 1938, where he taught
architecture at the Armour Institute. He designed the
Seagram Building in New York (1962-67), a glass and steel
building infused with the same affinity for balance and
a sleek visual form as his furniture. |
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