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Marcel Breuer - Wikipedia Marcel Lajos Breuer ( ˈbrɔɪər BROY-ur; 21 May 1902 – 1 July 1981) was a Hungarian-American modernist architect and furniture designer He moved to the United States in 1937 and became a naturalized American citizen in 1944 [1]
Marcel Breuer | Biography, Furniture, Chair, Facts | Britannica Marcel Breuer was an architect and designer, one of the most-influential exponents of the International Style; he was concerned with applying new forms and uses to newly developed technology and materials in order to create an art expressive of an industrial age
Marcel Breuer: From Bauhaus Visionary to Furniture Design Icon Hungarian-born Marcel Breuer was one of the most imaginative and influential designers and architects of the 20th century He studied and then taught at the Bauhaus School, revolutionizing fine arts, craft, and industrial design
Marcel Breuer Architecture, Bio, Ideas | TheArtStory Best known for his iconic chair designs, Breuer developed a thriving global practice that made him most important designers and architects of the modern age
Home - Marcel Breuer Digital Archive The Marcel Breuer Digital Archive (MBDA) includes nearly 80,000 digitized objects – held at various institutions – including drawings, photographs, letters and other materials related to every phase of Breuer’s career
MARCEL BREUER Marcel Breuer was a master of scale His designs ranged from the human anatomical scale of the chair to the domestic scale of his modern houses, the urban street scale of the museum, and the monumental scale of major international commissions
Marcel Breuer: The Pioneer of Tubular Steel Furniture Marcel Breuer (1902 – 1981) was Hungary’s architect and industrial designer He was born in the city of Pécs He began his career as a furniture designer and concluded it as an architect He may be best known as the architect who designed such buildings as the Whitney Museum in New York and the Paris Headquarters of UNESCO