Adolf Loos (1870-1933)

Austrian architect, critic, and interior designer Adolf Loos was against the ephemeral decorations of Art Nouveau and dedicated to purity of form. Additionally, he pioneered modern architecture.

Adolf Loos poster: A photo in black and white of an Adolf Loos poster of a man looking off to the side.
Adolf Loos poster

Image source: https://search.creativecommons.org/photos/f21c5f13-43bc-4e71-b202-402e87372751 by apfelaug

About His Life

Adolf Loos was an Austrian architect and is considered a precursors of modern architecture. He was born on 10 December 1870 in Brno, in Moravia, a region of Central Europe, which in recent years belonged to the Austro-Hungarian Empire. As a son of a sculptor, he grew up in his father’s workshop among marble blocks and chisels. He completed his studies and in 1893 he moved abroad to the United States and then to London. Then, in 1896, he returned to Europe and settled in Vienna. In the early years, he devoted himself to theoretical architecture and wrote numerous articles that set out the guidelines of his thought.

Cafè Museum, at Vienna, Austria, 1898 to 1899: the photo is taken fairly recently of the large light colored building.
Cafè Museum (1898 to 1899) in Vienna, Austria

Image source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caf%C3%A9_Museum#/media/File:Cafe_Museum_Strasse.jpg

His Architecture Works

As an architect, he was interested in residential architecture. His first project, in 1903, was the renovation of Villa Karma located in Montreux. The structure has extreme simplification of the surfaces and the rigorous volumetric study. Additionally, loos gained inspiration from the style and thought of Otto Wagnerthe partially symmetrical layout, the use of large surfaces of clear roofs, which contrast with the Doric order that marks the main entrance.

Villa Karma, Clarens, at Montreux, Switzerland, 1904 to 1906: A large white structure.
Villa Karma, Clarens (1904 to 1906) in Montreux, Switzerland

Source Image: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Villa_Karma_(4).jpg

In 1910, Adolf Loos created the Villa Steiner and the house on Michaelerplatz in Vienna called “(das) Haus Ohne Augenbrauen,” (house without eyebrows). Then, in 1912, he designed the Scheu House, also located in Vienna, which was one of the first to use a flat roof terrace.

Steiner House by Adolf Loos: A large white building with an arched, dark roof and a fenced yard along the front.
Steiner House by Adolf Loos

Image source: https://search.creativecommons.org/photos/8b1748da-5f2f-4ac8-81b2-fa9c34bc0a15 by yellow book

In the design of these houses, Loos invents the Raumplan, a spatial solution in which rooms have different heights depending on function, and therefore the relationship between different volumes suggests different heights. Le Corbusier will take up this idea in some of his most famous architecture projects.

American Bar, Vienna, Austria, 1907, Adolf Loos: A dark lit bar with warm-toned lamps along the right wall and simple, romantic features throughout the space.
American Bar (1907) in Vienna, Austria by Adolf Loos

Image source: https://search.creativecommons.org/photos/eb48f0f1-926c-4301-8a9b-303241039167 by roryrory

About His Style

Since 1900, Loos proved to be hostile towards the Secession, the Austrian branch of Art Nouveau, and in particular towards the ornament, so heavily promoted by the secessionists.

Additionally, Loos’s fundamental argument against the use of ornament was because he disliked the waste of time and material caused by the decoration, which was a purely formal characteristic for him. According to the architect, the ornament was a form of slavery of practice, exercised by the designer on the craftsman to stage the nostalgia of the past that hides the true forms of modernity.

Scheu House, Vienna, Austria, 1912-1913: A large white structure.
Scheu House (1912-1913) in Vienna, Austria

Image source: https://search.creativecommons.org/photos/0a03ea5e-1483-4b7a-8120-946f73058010 by yellow book

The bare and sparse facades that he opposed with opulent and decorative interiors, seem to contradict the rational principles he supported. Further, he does not reject the ornament when it was an intrinsic characteristic to the material, able to withstand time and fashion. In the interiors, like Mies van der Rohe, he used plenty of semi-precious materials such as wood, metal, and marble. Yet, his aversion to the ornament was not purely aesthetic, but primarily rational, against the ephemeral and the frivolous.

His architecture carries evocative symbolic interpretations demonstrating keen attention to the territorial and human context. Further, this is the reason why his masterpieces are the small private houses.

House on Michalerplatz, Vienna, Austria, 1910-1911: A large light colored, simple structure on a busy street corner.
House on Michalerplatz (1910-1911) in Vienna, Austria

Image source: https://search.creativecommons.org/photos/7df4b2cd-ce4e-445b-9910-91e964d1ce57 by andynash

His Writings

In the writings of Adolf Loos, more and more attention was paid to an overkill of decor both in traditional Viennese design and in later products of the Vienna Secession and the Vienna Workshop. In 1898, in the pages of Ver Sacrum, the organ of the Vienna Secession, Adolf Loos published an essay that marked the beginning of a long theoretical opposition to the then-popular art-neo movement. His theories culminated in a short essay titled “Ornaments and Crime,” published in 1908. Thanks to this writing, Loos is considered one of the founders of European Rationalism.

A photo of his work: A yellow colored cover with large black and green text.
A photo of his work

Image source: https://nisayeles.wordpress.com

For Adolf Loos, the lack of ornamentation in architecture was a sign of spiritual strength. His essay quickly became a theoretical manifest and a key document in modernist literature and spread widely abroad.

His Major Works

  • Cafè Museum in Vienna, Austria (1898 to 1899)
  • Villa Karma, Clarens, in Montreux, Switzerland (1904 to 1906)
  • American Bar in Vienna, Austria (1907)
  • Steiner House in Vienna, Austria (1910)
  • House on the Michaelerplatz in Vienna, Austria (1910 to 1911)
  • Scheu House in Vienna, Austria (1912 to 1913)
  • Schneidersalon Knize in Vienna, Austria (1909 – 1913)
  • Moller House in Vienna, Austria (1927 to 1928)
  • Villa Müller in Prague, Czech Republic (1930)
Villa Müller by Adolf Loos (1929-30): A close up of the wooden door of a simple white structure.
Villa Müller by Adolf Loos (1929-30)

Image source: https://search.creativecommons.org/photos/46c61cef-501f-4c15-b129-443efd8256ea by roryrory

Villa Müller-Adolf Loos, 1929-30: Additional photo of the structure zoomed out.
Villa Müller by Adolf Loos (1929-30)

Image source: https://search.creativecommons.org/photos/7871648f-27c6-442c-8841-9014bb6dc6a4 by roryrory


Info sources:

architect.architecture.sk

www.designculture.it

For more references, please also visit: www.jbdesign.it/idesignpro

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