MOMA - 1985 Fact Sheet, Wolf Tegethoff
MOMA - 1985 Fact Sheet, Wolf Tegethoff
MOMA - 1985 Fact Sheet, Wolf Tegethoff
November 1985
FACT SHEET
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11 West 53 Street, New York, N Y 10019-5486 Tel: 212-708-9400 Coble: MODERNART Telex: 62370 MODART
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THE ARCHITECT Ludwig Mies (van der Rohe was his mother's surname) was born
in 1886 in the ancient city of Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle), on
Germany's border with Belgium. He attended the Cathedral School
there until he was thirteen, and spent two years more at a trade
school; at fifteen his formal education ended. From his father,
a master mason and proprietor of a small stone-cutting shop,
Mies learned the possibilities and limitations of masonry
construction. In 1905, at age nineteen, he went to Berlin to
gain knowledge of wood construction and for two years apprenticed
himself to Bruno Paul, a leading decorator and furniture
designer. In 1907 he left Paul's office to build his first house.
From 1908 to 1911 Mies worked for Peter Behrens, leaving in
1912 to begin his career as an independent architect.
Following his service during the first world war, Mies returned
to independent work in Berlin until 1937. Five projects from
the twenties established his fame: the Friedrichstrasse
Skyscraper (competition entry, 1921), the Glass Skyscraper
(proposal, 1922), the Concrete Office Building (1922), the Brick
Country House (1923), and the Concrete Country House (1923).
From 1926 to 1932 he was first vice-president of the Deutscher
Werkbund, an influential organization founded by industrialists
and architects to improve the quality of German architecture
and design.
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THE ARCHIVE The Ludwig Mies van der Rohe Archive was established in 1968
as a division of the Museum's Department of Architecture and
Design and contains over 20,000 sketches, presentation drawings,
working drawings, blueprints, architectural models, and furniture
designs by Mies and his associate Lilly Reich. The Archive
also includes work-related correspondence from 1911 to 1969
(his personal correspondence was given to the Library of
Congress).
TRAVEL After its New York showing, the exhibition will be seen at The
Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (May 8 - August 10, 1986),
the New National Gallery, Berlin (November 13, 1986 - January 15,
1987), and a Barcelona showing will follow (under the sponsorship
of the Foundation of the German Pavilion of Barcelona by Mies
van der Rohe).
No. 104