Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Marcel Breuer. Table, Model B19, ca. 1928 Brooklyn Museum Cesca This is a chronological list of houses, commercial buildings and other works by Marcel Breuer .
The National Building Museum in Washington, D.C., held an exhibition in 2007–2008 dedicated to the work of Marcel Breuer titled Marcel Breuer: Design and Architecture. [25] Filmmaker James Crump has directed Breuer's Bohemia, a feature documentary film that examines Breuer's experimental house designs in New England following the Second World ...
The Marcel Breuer House and Studio is a historic property at 634 Black Pond Road in Wellfleet, Massachusetts. Built in 1949 and enlarged in 1962 to designs by Marcel Breuer, it served as a summer retreat and experimental architecture landscape for the architect until his retirement in 1976. The property remains in the Breuer family, and ...
Buildings designed by Marcel Breuer (1902-1981) —the Hungarian born architect and furniture designer. The Bauhaus trained Modernist architect practiced primarily in the United States after 1937. Pages in category "Marcel Breuer buildings"
Wolfson Trailer House is a 1949 house designed by the pioneering modernist Marcel Breuer in Salt Point, New York, United States.Commissioned by Breuer's friend, the artist Sydney Wolfson, it is among the most distinctive of Breuer's residential designs.
Marcel Breuer. Long Chair, c. 1935–1936 Brooklyn Museum. The Isokon Long Chair is a chair designed by Marcel Breuer for the Isokon company in 1935–36. The chair is considered one of the most important pieces of furniture to emerge from the inter-war modern movement [1] and it is in the permanent collections of several internationally renowned museums including the Victoria and Albert Museum.
The Ariston Club is a building in Mar del Plata, Argentina designed by Marcel Breuer. [1] [2] It is part of the Modern Movement, [3] [4] [5] and complies with four of the five Le Corbusier's Points of Architecture: pilotis, free designing of the floor plan, free designing of the façade, horizontal windows.
The house was designed by modernist architect Marcel Breuer in 1954 and 1955 for June Halverson Starkey (née Alworth). [1] The building's design references Breuer's hallmark bi-nuclear plan, in which sleeping and living spaces are linked through the home's entrance. [2]