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Otto
Wagner was born in Penzing, near Vienna in 1841. He studied at the Technische
Hochschule in Vienna, at the Berlin Bauakademie, and at the Academy of
Fine Arts in Vienna. In 1894 he supervised and taught at a special school
of architecture within the Academy of Fine Arts. Moderne Architecktur,
his inaugural address at the school, called for an architecture based
exclusively on modern materials and modern construction methods.
In 1890 Wagner
designed a new city plan for Vienna, but only his urban rail network was
used. This network borrowed from the classical urban monumentality of
his early training but adopted the modern construction and functional
planning he so adamantly demanded. The buildings within the network exhibited
a decorative styling that owed much to the Secession school.
Wagner continued
searching for a style which embodied the principles he taught. In his
later works he dispensed with almost all ornamentation and used materials
in their simplest forms. These works show a simple but effective blending
of plan, space and materials.
A highly influential
figure in the development of Modern architecture, Wagner died in Vienna
in 1918.
Works
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