Gottfried Semper

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Image:Gottfried Semper.jpg

Gottfried Semper (November 29 1803 - May 15 1879) was a German architect, art critic, and professor of architecture, who designed and built the Semper Oper in Dresden between 1838 and 1841. In 1849 he took part in the May Uprising in Dresden and was put on the government's wanted list. Semper fled first to Zürich and later to London. Later he returned to Germany after the 1862 amnesty granted to the revolutionaries.

Semper wrote extensively about the origins of architecture, especially in his book The Four Elements of Architecture from 1851, and he was one of the major players of the controversial debates surrounding polychrome architecture of ancient Greece. Beside the Dresden Opera House and a project for an opera house at Munich, later cannibalised by Wagner for the Bayreuth Festspielhaus, he designed works at any scale, from a baton for Richard Wagner to urban interventions like the re-design of the Ringstrasse in Vienna.

Contents

Life

Early Life (to 1834)

Semper was born into a well-to-do industrialist family in Altona. The fifth of eight children, he attended the Johanneum School in Hamburg before starting his university education at Göttingen in 1823, where he studied history and mathematics. He subsequently studied architecture in 1825 at the University of Munich under Friedrich von Gärtner. In 1826, Semper travelled to Paris in order to work under the architect Franz Christian Gau and he was present when the July Revolution of 1830 broke out. Between 1830 and 1833, he travelled to Italy and Greece in order to study the architecture and designs of antiquity. In 1832, he spent four months involved in archaeological research of the famous Akropolis in Athens.

During this period, he became very interested in the Biedermeier-inspired polychromy debate, which centred around the question whether buildings in Ancient Greece and Rome had been colorfully painted or not. His 1834 publication Vorläufige Bemerkungen über bemalte Architectur und Plastik bei den Alten (Preliminary Remarks on Polychrome Architecture and Sculpture in Antiquity) brought him sudden recognition in architectural and aesthetic circles across Europe[1].

Dresden Period (1834 - 1849)

Image:Dresden Hoftheater J C A Richter.jpg On September 30, 1834 Semper obtained a post as Professor of Architecture at the Königlichen Akademie der bildenden Künste in Dresden thanks largely to the efforts and support of his former teacher Franz Christian Gau and swore an oath of allegiance to the King (formerly Elector) of Saxony, Anthony Clement. The flourishing growth of Dresden during this period provided the young architect with considerable creative opportunities.

Certain civic structures remain today, such as the Elbe-facing gallery of the Zwinger Palace complex. His first buildimg for the Dresden Hoftheater burnt down, and the second, today called the Semperoper, was built in 1871. Other buildings also remain indelibly attached to his name, such as the Maternity Hospital, the Synagogue (destroyed during the Third Reich), the Oppenheim Palace, and the Villa Rosa built for the banker Martin Wilhelm Oppenheim. This last construction stands as a prototpye of German villa architecture.

On September 1, 1835 Semper married Bertha Thimmig. The marriage ultimately produced six children.

A convinced Republican, Semper took a leading role in the May 1849 uprising which swept over the city along with his friend Richard Wagner. He was a member of the Civic Guard (Kommunalgarde) and helped to erect barricades in the streets. When the rebellion collapsed, Semper was considered a leading agitator for democratic change and a ringleader against government authority and he was forced to flee the city.

He was destined never to return to the city that would, ironically, become most associated with his architectural (and political) legacy. The Saxon government maintained a warrant for his arrest until 1863. When the Semper-designed Hoftheater burnt down in 1869, King John, on the urging of the citizenry, commissioned Semper to build a new one. Semper produced the plans, but left the actual construction to his son, Manfred.

Post-Revolutionary Period (1849 - 1855)

After stays in Zwickau, Hof, Karlsruhe and Strasbourg, Semper eventually ended up back in Paris, like many other disillusioned Republicans from the 1848 Revolutions (such as Heinrich Heine and Ludwig Börne). In the Fall of 1850, he travelled to London, England. But while he was able to pick up occasional contracts - including participation in the design of the funeral carriage for the Duke of Wellington - he found no steady employment. If his stay in London was disappointing professionally, however, it proved a fertile period for Semper's theoretical, creative and academic development. He published Die vier Elemente der Baukunst (The Four Elements of Architecture) in 1851 and Wissenschaft, Industrie und Kunst (Science, Industry and Art) in 1852. These works would ultimately provide the groundwork for his most widely regarded publication, Der Stil in den technischen und tektonischen Künsten oder Praktische Ästhetik, which was published in two volumes in 1860 and 1863.

The Zürich Period (1855 - 1871)

To be completed

His Later Life (from 1871)

To be completed

Image:Semperopera.jpg

Principal Architectural Designs

  • Dresden
    • Hoftheater – 1838-1841 (destroyed by fire in 1869)
    • Villa Rosa – 1839 (destroyed in the Second World War)
    • Synagoge – 1839-1840 (destroyed on November 9, 1938)
    • Oppenheim-Palace – 1845-1848
    • Painting Gallery – 1847-1855
    • Neues Hoftheater (Semperoper) – 1871-1878
  • Zürich
    • City Hall – 1858
    • Polytechnical School, (ETH) – 1858-1864
  • Winterthur
    • City Hall – 1865-1869
  • Vienna
    • Municipal Theater (Burgtheater) – 1873 - 1888
    • Museum of Art History (Kunsthistorisches Museum) (1872 – 1881, finished 1889)
    • Natural History Museum (Naturhistorisches Museum) (1872 – 1881, finished 1891)

Legacy

To be completed

Sources

  • Herrmann, Wolfgang: Gottfried Semper: In Search of Architecture, Cambridge (Mass) and London, 1984
  • Mallgrave, Harry Francis: Gottfried Semper - Architect of the Nineteenth Century, New Haven and London, 1996

See also

External link

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