Friedensreich Hundertwasser
Friedensreich Hundertwasser (December 15, 1928 February 19, 2000)
was an Austrian painter and sculptor. By the end of the 20th century,
he was arguably the best-known living Austrian artist, though he was always
controversial.
He was born Friedrich Stowasser to a Jewish family in Vienna and attended
the Montessori school in 1936. Before he was twenty, all of his relatives
on his mother's side were killed in the Holocaust. He briefly attended
the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts in 1948 and began producing his own works
in the late 1940s.
Hundertwasser's original, unruly, sometimes shocking artistic vision
expressed itself in pictorial art, environmentalism, philosophy, and design
of facades, postage stamps, flags, and clothing (among other areas). The
common themes in his work are a rejection of the straight line, bright
colours, organic forms, a reconciliation of humans with nature, and a
strong individualism. He remains sui generis, although his architectural
work is comparable to Antoni Gaudí in its biomorphic forms and
use of tile. He was inspired by the works of Egon Schiele from an early
date, and his style was often compared to that of Gustav Klimt. He was
fascinated with spirals, and called straight lines "the devil's tools".
He called his theory of art "transautomatism", based on Surrealist
automatism, but focusing on the experience of the viewer, rather than
the artist.
His adopted surname is based on the translation of Sto (the Czech word
for "hundred") into German. The name Friedensreich has a double
meaning as "Peaceland" or "Peacerich" (in the sense
of 'peaceful'). The other names he chose for himself, Regentag and Dunkelbunt,
translate to "Rainy day" and "Dark, multicoloured".
His name Friedensreich Hundertwasser means, "Peace-Kingdom Hundred-Water".
Although Hundertwasser first achieved notoriety for his boldly-coloured
paintings, he is more widely renowned today for his revolutionary architectural
designs, which incorporate natural features of the landscape, and use
of irregular forms in his building design. Hundertwasserhaus, a low-income
apartment block in Vienna, features undulating floors ("an uneven
floor is a melody to the feet"), a roof covered with earth and grass,
and large trees growing from inside the rooms, with limbs extending from
windows. He took no payment for the design of Hundertwasserhaus, declaring
that it was worth it, to "prevent something ugly from going up in
its place".
He felt that standard architecture could not be called art, and declared
that the design of any building should be influenced by the aesthetics
of its eventual tenants. Hundertwasser was also known for his performance
art, in which he would, for instance, appear in public in the nude promoting
an ecologically friendly flush-less toilet.
On July 4, 1958 he read his celebrated and controversial Verschimmelungs-Manifest,
the so-called Mould Manifesto against rationalism in architecture, in
the abbey of Seckau. "A person in a rented apartment must be able
to lean out of his window and scrape off the masonry within arm's reach.
And he must be allowed to take a long brush and paint everything outside
within arm's reach. So that it will be visible from afar to everyone in
the street that someone lives there who is different from the imprisoned,
enslaved, standardised man who lives next door."
In 1972 he published the manifesto Your window right your tree
duty: planting trees in an urban environments was to become obligatory:
"If man walks in nature's midst, then he is nature's guest and must
learn to behave as a well-brought-up guest."
His work has been used for flags, stamps, coins, posters, schools, churches,
a public toilet in his adopted home of New Zealand, and apartment buildings.
His most famous flag is the Koru Flag; he has also designed stamps for
the Cape Verde islands and for the United Nations post administration
in Geneva on the occasion of the 35th anniversary of the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights.
Hundertwasser considered New Zealand as his official home, and no matter
where he went in the world, his watch was always set to New Zealand time.
That finally became the place he was buried after his death at sea in
2000.[citation needed]
In 1999 he started his last project named Die Grüne Zitadelle von
Magdeburg. Although he never finished this work completely, the building
was put up a few years later in Magdeburg, a town in central Germany,
and finally opened on October 3, 2005. (German Wikipedia: Hundertwasserhaus)
[edit] Buildings
* District Heating Plant Spittelau, Vienna
* Hundertwasser House, Vienna
* Hundertwasserhaus Waldspirale, Darmstadt
* Kindergarten Heddernheim, Frankfurt
* Motorway Restaurant, Bad Fischau, Austria
* Hot Springs Village, Blumau, Styria
* Hundertwasserkirche, Baernbach, Styria
* Wohnen unterm Regenturm, Plochingen, Germany
* Quixote Winery, Napa Valley, (USA), 1992-1999 (his only building in
the US)
* Maishima Incineration Plant, Osaka (Japan), 1997-2000
* Public toilet, Kawakawa (NZ), 1999
* Hundertwasser "environmental railway station", Uelzen, 1999-2001
* Die Grüne Zitadelle von Magdeburg, Magdeburg, Germany, 2003-2005
Friedensreich Hundertwasser. (2007, January 31). In Wikipedia, The Free
Encyclopedia. Retrieved 01:55, February 2, 2007, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Friedensreich_Hundertwasser&oldid=104711266
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