
Claire Beck Loos a adăugat o fotografie
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Claire
Claire Beck Loos (4 November 1904 – 19 January 1942) was a Czech-Austrian photographer and writer. She was the third wife of early modernist Czechoslovak-Austrian architect Adolf Loos.
🔍 MăreșteIn memoriam
Claire Beck Loos (4 November 1904 – 19 January 1942) was a Czech-Austrian photographer and writer. She was the third wife of early modernist Czechoslovak-Austrian architect Adolf Loos.

Claire Beck Loos a adăugat o fotografie
acum 11 ore
Claire Beck Loos (4 November 1904 – 19 January 1942) was a Czech-Austrian photographer and writer. She was the third wife of early modernist Czechoslovak-Austrian architect Adolf Loos.

Claire Beck Loos a lăsat un gând
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Legacy In 2012–2013, some of Loos's photographs were included in the exhibition Vienna's Shooting Girls: Jewish Women Photographers in Vienna. In 2011, Adolf Loos Privat was published in its first English translation under the title Adolf Loos: A Private Portrait.

Claire Beck Loos a lăsat un gând
acum 11 ore
Biography Claire Beck was born in Plzeň, Bohemia, Austria-Hungary (now the Czech Republic) in 1904, one of three children of Olga (Feigl) Beck and Otto Beck. Claire became engaged to Adolf Loos (1870–1933) after he invited the Beck family to see a Josephine Baker performance in Vienna in the spring of 1929. They were married in Vienna on 18 July of the same year over her parents' opposition to the much older Adolf. Because it was a mixed marriage (Claire was from a Jewish family, Adolf was not), the Jewish community refused to execute the marriage. They divorced in 1932. Loos's immediate and extended relations—the Beck, Hirsch, Turnowsky, and Kraus families—and her friends the Semlers were some of Adolf's first clients. They hired him to remodel apartment interiors in Plzeň and Vienna, and it was there that Adolf first began to open up the "interstitial spaces" between walls to create continuous rooms. In 1936, Loos published Adolf Loos Privat, a literary work of "razor-sharp anecdotes" about her ex-husband's character, habits, and sayings that was illustrated with family photographs. Published by the Johannes-Presse in Vienna, the book was intended to raise funds for Adolf Loos's tomb, as he had died destitute…