Richard Riemerschmid’s Extraordinary Living Things (The MIT Press) by Freyja Hartzell
Requirements: .ePUB reader, 11.8 MB
Overview: How Richard Riemerschmid’s designs of everyday—but “extraordinary”—objects recalibrate our understanding of modernism.
At the beginning of the twentieth century, German artist Richard Riemerschmid (1868–1957) was known as a symbolist painter and, by the advent of World War I, had become an important modern architect. This, however, the first English-language book on Riemerschmid, celebrates his understudied legacy as a designer of everyday objects—furniture, tableware, clothing—that were imbued with an extraordinary sense of vitality and even personality. Freyja Hartzell makes a case for the importance of Riemerschmid’s designed objects in the development of modern design—and for the power of everyday things to change the way we live our lives, understand history, and design our future. Hartzell offers for the first time an interpretive history of Riemerschmid’s design practice embedded in a fresh examination of modernism told by the objects themselves.
Genre: Non-Fiction > General
Download Instructions:
https://ouo.io/zHrypnJ
https://ouo.io/TxO6fY7