VISION Architect

General Engineering Architecture


ludwieg mies van der rohe (1886-1969)


was born in aachen, germany, on march 27, 1886. 

after having trained with his father, a master stonemason. 
at 19 he moved to berlin, where he
worked for bruno paul,
the art nouveau architect and furniture designer. 
at 20 he received his first independent commission, 
to plan a house for a philosopher (alois riehl). 
in 1908 he began working for the architect 
peter behrens. he studied the architecture of the 
prussian karl friedrich schinkel and frank lloyd wright.
he opened his own office in berlin in 1912,
and married in 1913.
---
after world war I, he began studying the skyscraper 
and designed two innovative steel-framed towers 
encased in glass. one of them was the friedrichstrasse 
skyscraper, designed in 1921 for a competition. 
it was never built, although it drew critical praise and 
foreshadowed his skyscraper designs of the late 40s and 50s.
---
in 1921, when his marriage ended, he changed 
his name, adding the dutch 'van der' and his mother’s 
maiden name, 'rohe': ludwig mies became ludwig mies 
van der rohe.
---
in the 20’s he was active in a number of the berlin 
avant-garde circles ( the magazine 'G' and organizations such 
as the 'novembergruppe', 'zehner ring', and 'arbeitsrat für kunst')
that supported modern art and architecture along with artists 
like hans richter, el lissitzky, and theo van doesburg, 
among others. major contributions to the architectural 
philosophies of the late 1920s and 1930s he made as 
artistic director of the werkbund-sponsored weissenhof 
project, a model housing colony in stuttgart. 
the modern apartments and houses were designed by 
leading european architects, including a block by mies.



---
in 1927 he designed one of his most famous buildings, 
in 1929. this small hall, known as the barcelona
pavilion (for which he also designed the famous chrome 
and leather 'barcelona chair'), had a flat roof supported by 
columns. the pavilion’s internal walls, made of glass and marble, 
could be moved around as they did not support the structure. 
the concept of fluid space with a seamless flow between 
indoors and outdoors was further explored in other projects 
he designed for decades to come.
mies began working with lilly reich, who remained his 
collaborator and companion for more than ten years. 



---
in 1930, mies met new york architect philip johnson, 
who included several of his projects in
MoMA’s first architecture exhibition held in 1932, 'modern
architecture: international exhibition', thanks to which 
mies’s work began to be known in the united states.
---
in the30s, none of his designs were built due to the 
sweeping economic and political changes overtaking 
germany. he was director of the bauhaus school from 
1930 until its disbandment in 1933, shut down under 
pressure from the new nazi government. 
he moved to the united states in 1937. 
from 1938 to 1958 he was head of the architecture 
department at the armour institute of technology in 
chicago, later renamed the illinois institute of technology. 
in the 40s, was asked to design a new campus for the 
school, a project in which he continued to refine his 
steel-and-glass style. he had also formed a new relationship 
with chicago artist lora marx that would last for the rest of his 
life.
---
by 1944, he had become an american citizen and was 
well established professionally. 
in this period he designed one of his most famous 
buildings, a small weekend retreat outside chicago,
a transparent box framed by eight exterior steel 
columns. / the ‘farnsworth house’ is one of the most 
radically minimalist houses ever designed. 
its interior, a single room, is subdivided by partitions 
and completely enclosed in glass.
---
in the 50s he continued to develop this concept of open, 
flexible space on a much larger scale:
in 1953, he developed the convention hall, innovative was 
the structural system that spanned large distances.
during this period he also realized his dream of building a 
glass skyscraper.
/ the ' twin towers' in chicago were completed in 1951, followed
by other high-rises in chicago, new york, detroit, toronto...
culminating in 1954 with / the 'seagram' building in new york, 
hailed as a masterpiece of skyscraper design. 
---
for his career he achieved in 1959 the 
'orden pour le merite' (germany) and in 1963 the 
'presidential medal of freedom' (USA).
---
in 1962, his career came full-circle when he was invited to 
design the 'new national gallery' in berlin. 
his design for this building achieved his long-held vision of 
an exposed steel structure that directly connected interior 
space to the landscape. 
he returned to berlin several times while the gallery was under 
construction, but was unable to attend the opening in 1968.
he died in chicago on august 17, 1969.

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