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The Lost Architecture of Jean Welz
Taschenbuch von Peter Wyeth
Sprache: Englisch

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Beschreibung

A deserted Paris house holds the mystery of a brilliant Viennese modernist who worked alongside Le Corbusier and Adolf Loos before vanishing.

Wyeth takes readers on a deeply personal and revelatory journey. This research process, which readers experience vicariously, makes Wyeth’s prose exhilarating as tiny details become breakthroughs of grand proportions. […] For late architect and painter Jean Welz, designs should reflect one’s aesthetic and political commitments. This narrative will resonate with anyone interested in the politics of architecture, or the pursuit of knowledge at large.
—Hyperallergic "BEST ART BOOKS OF 2022"

Welz’s having been “lost” is indeed a travesty of architectural history to which the book serves as a welcome antidote.
—Artforum

A leading painter still highly regarded in South Africa, Jean Welz's prior architectural career has been virtually unknown until a string of discoveries unfolded for author and filmmaker Peter Wyeth, allowing him to narrate this amazing true tale of genius. Trained in ultra-sophisticated, but conservative Vienna, Welz was sent to Paris for the 1925 Art Deco exhibition by his influential employer, renowned architect Josef Hoffmann. There he met preeminent modern architects Le Corbusier and Adolf Loos. The latter employed him to assist in building a house for the founder of Dada, Tristan Tzara. They all mixed in avant-garde circles at the Dôme Café in Montparnasse along with Welz’s classmate from Vienna, later Chicago-based architect Gabriel Guevrekian; Welz’s future employer Raymond Fischer, whose archive was mostly destroyed by Nazis; and photographer André Kertész.

Through Welz’s South African family archive, author Wyeth retrieves stories, letters, portfolios, and photographs generations after Welz’s death that unravel his heroic designs, his stunning built critique of Corbusier’s “Five Points of Architecture,” a gravestone for Marx’s daughter, and the many ways that Welz disappeared amongst his collaborators, intentionally and not. This account of why Jean Welz did not become a famous name in architecture takes us through his brother’s Nazi-art-dealings, illness, betrayal, emigration, and an uncompromising artist’s vision at the same time sifting through significant, literally-concrete evidence of Welz’s built projects and visionary designs.

A deserted Paris house holds the mystery of a brilliant Viennese modernist who worked alongside Le Corbusier and Adolf Loos before vanishing.

Wyeth takes readers on a deeply personal and revelatory journey. This research process, which readers experience vicariously, makes Wyeth’s prose exhilarating as tiny details become breakthroughs of grand proportions. […] For late architect and painter Jean Welz, designs should reflect one’s aesthetic and political commitments. This narrative will resonate with anyone interested in the politics of architecture, or the pursuit of knowledge at large.
—Hyperallergic "BEST ART BOOKS OF 2022"

Welz’s having been “lost” is indeed a travesty of architectural history to which the book serves as a welcome antidote.
—Artforum

A leading painter still highly regarded in South Africa, Jean Welz's prior architectural career has been virtually unknown until a string of discoveries unfolded for author and filmmaker Peter Wyeth, allowing him to narrate this amazing true tale of genius. Trained in ultra-sophisticated, but conservative Vienna, Welz was sent to Paris for the 1925 Art Deco exhibition by his influential employer, renowned architect Josef Hoffmann. There he met preeminent modern architects Le Corbusier and Adolf Loos. The latter employed him to assist in building a house for the founder of Dada, Tristan Tzara. They all mixed in avant-garde circles at the Dôme Café in Montparnasse along with Welz’s classmate from Vienna, later Chicago-based architect Gabriel Guevrekian; Welz’s future employer Raymond Fischer, whose archive was mostly destroyed by Nazis; and photographer André Kertész.

Through Welz’s South African family archive, author Wyeth retrieves stories, letters, portfolios, and photographs generations after Welz’s death that unravel his heroic designs, his stunning built critique of Corbusier’s “Five Points of Architecture,” a gravestone for Marx’s daughter, and the many ways that Welz disappeared amongst his collaborators, intentionally and not. This account of why Jean Welz did not become a famous name in architecture takes us through his brother’s Nazi-art-dealings, illness, betrayal, emigration, and an uncompromising artist’s vision at the same time sifting through significant, literally-concrete evidence of Welz’s built projects and visionary designs.

Über den Autor

Peter Wyeth has been making films since the 1970s, including several with the Arts Council of Great Britain, one of which about a modernist block of flats in London, inspired by Hokusai (“12 Views of Kensal House”) was runner-up for best documentary. He started a forgotten film-mag North by North West, and in 1994 directed “The Diary of Arthur Crew Inman,” based on the 17-million-word and longest diary in America and named a London Times “Film of the Week.” From 1999–2003, Wyeth was head of the film school at University of the Arts London, where he taught for ten years and set up the student-run channel [...]. His short film “Pane” won a Turner Classic Movies award in 2003. His book The Matter of Vision: Effective Neurobiology and Cinema was published by Indiana University Press in 2015 (in the UK by John Libbey Media) and over the past twelve years he has written dozens of articles on architecture and design for The Modernist. He continues to direct, including for television. He lives between Paris and London.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

The Mystery of Jean Welz

Part I: Invisible

Jean Welz Does Not Exist

Le Château Moche — Paris, Christmas Day 2012

The Tradouw Pass — 1940

Part II: Vienna

Finis Austriae — Vienna, October 1918

Josef Hoffmann and The First Wave

Adolf Loos and the Second Wave

Hans Welz Architect

Part III: Paris

Art Deco — Paris, 1925

The Guevrekian Letter

The Third Man Mallet-Stevens / Le Corbusier / Jean Welz

Raymond Fischer

Le Chemin Aérien / The Aerial Way

“Un Nègre Viennois”

Part IV: Oeuvre

The Portfolio

House for an Artist

Inondation — Montauban, 1931

Maison Landau A Minimum House

Villa Darmstadter —1932

Oswald Haerdtl — 1932

Maison Zilveli — 1933

Mont D’Or and Pavillon D’Autriche The Unbuilt

Part V: Tales

A Tale of Two Balconies

A Tale of Two Brothers The Dealer and the Artist

Corbusier’s Note

The Martienssen Affair

A Tale of Three Monuments

Part VI: Jean

House on the Lake

The Dialogues of Jean Welz

Pains and Pleasures of Anonymity

A Solitary Adventure The Character of Jean Welz

Christensen Gallery Inger Welz

Zilveli Destroyed

Appendices

After Architecture South Africa Addendum

Bibliography

Index

Acknowledgments

Plates

Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2022
Genre: Kunst
Rubrik: Kunst & Musik
Thema: Architektur
Medium: Taschenbuch
Inhalt: Kartoniert / Broschiert
ISBN-13: 9781954600003
ISBN-10: 1954600003
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Wyeth, Peter
Hersteller: Deirdre Braud
Maße: 212 x 139 x 21 mm
Von/Mit: Peter Wyeth
Erscheinungsdatum: 28.06.2022
Gewicht: 0,48 kg
Artikel-ID: 119659118
Über den Autor

Peter Wyeth has been making films since the 1970s, including several with the Arts Council of Great Britain, one of which about a modernist block of flats in London, inspired by Hokusai (“12 Views of Kensal House”) was runner-up for best documentary. He started a forgotten film-mag North by North West, and in 1994 directed “The Diary of Arthur Crew Inman,” based on the 17-million-word and longest diary in America and named a London Times “Film of the Week.” From 1999–2003, Wyeth was head of the film school at University of the Arts London, where he taught for ten years and set up the student-run channel [...]. His short film “Pane” won a Turner Classic Movies award in 2003. His book The Matter of Vision: Effective Neurobiology and Cinema was published by Indiana University Press in 2015 (in the UK by John Libbey Media) and over the past twelve years he has written dozens of articles on architecture and design for The Modernist. He continues to direct, including for television. He lives between Paris and London.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

The Mystery of Jean Welz

Part I: Invisible

Jean Welz Does Not Exist

Le Château Moche — Paris, Christmas Day 2012

The Tradouw Pass — 1940

Part II: Vienna

Finis Austriae — Vienna, October 1918

Josef Hoffmann and The First Wave

Adolf Loos and the Second Wave

Hans Welz Architect

Part III: Paris

Art Deco — Paris, 1925

The Guevrekian Letter

The Third Man Mallet-Stevens / Le Corbusier / Jean Welz

Raymond Fischer

Le Chemin Aérien / The Aerial Way

“Un Nègre Viennois”

Part IV: Oeuvre

The Portfolio

House for an Artist

Inondation — Montauban, 1931

Maison Landau A Minimum House

Villa Darmstadter —1932

Oswald Haerdtl — 1932

Maison Zilveli — 1933

Mont D’Or and Pavillon D’Autriche The Unbuilt

Part V: Tales

A Tale of Two Balconies

A Tale of Two Brothers The Dealer and the Artist

Corbusier’s Note

The Martienssen Affair

A Tale of Three Monuments

Part VI: Jean

House on the Lake

The Dialogues of Jean Welz

Pains and Pleasures of Anonymity

A Solitary Adventure The Character of Jean Welz

Christensen Gallery Inger Welz

Zilveli Destroyed

Appendices

After Architecture South Africa Addendum

Bibliography

Index

Acknowledgments

Plates

Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2022
Genre: Kunst
Rubrik: Kunst & Musik
Thema: Architektur
Medium: Taschenbuch
Inhalt: Kartoniert / Broschiert
ISBN-13: 9781954600003
ISBN-10: 1954600003
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Wyeth, Peter
Hersteller: Deirdre Braud
Maße: 212 x 139 x 21 mm
Von/Mit: Peter Wyeth
Erscheinungsdatum: 28.06.2022
Gewicht: 0,48 kg
Artikel-ID: 119659118
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