Fritz Schumacher (architect)
Fritz Schumacher (4 November 1869 – 5 November 1947) was a German architect and urban designer.
Biography
Schumacher was born into a diplomatic family in Bremen in 1869. The family Schumacher has been living there since 15th century.
He spent his childhood in Bogotá, Colombia (1872–74) and in New York (1875–83). After studying in Munich and Berlin, in 1901 Schumacher became a professor for interior design at the technical university in Dresden. He constructed many municipal buildings there, often with former student and architectural sculptor Richard Kuöhl.
1908, age 39, he accepted an offer as building director for the city of Hamburg. His designs for the buildings in Hamburg included the Museum für Hamburgische Geschichte and the Staatliche Gewerbeschule Hamburg.[1] These designs till his retirement in 1933 changed the face of the city towards the art and architecture movement of Neue Sachlichkeit and gave an emphasis on the local building material of "brick". The legacy of his achievements are still visible in many districts of Hamburg today, and very often base for the city's current urban design issues. Schumacher died in 1947 in a hospital in Hamburg.[citation needed]
List of works
See List of works by Fritz Schumacher
References
- ↑ The Museum, Hamburg Museum, accessed December 2011
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fritz Schumacher. |
- Literature by and about Fritz Schumacher (architect) in the German National Library catalogue
- Fritz-Schumacher-Gesellschaft website
- Fritz-Schumacher-Institut Hochschule für bildende Künste Hamburg
- picture of Schumacher buildings in Hamburg bildarchiv-hamburg.de
- Fritz Schumacher. 1869 - 1947 architekten-portrait.de
- Fritz-Schumacher-Preise (PDF, 106 kB)
- last picture (Gertrud Lerbs-Bernecker) art-on-paper.ch
|