Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Expressionist_architecture> ?p ?o }
- Expressionist_architecture abstract "Expressionist architecture was an architectural movement that developed in Europe during the first decades of the 20th century in parallel with the expressionist visual and performing arts that especially developed and dominated in Germany.Brick Expressionism is a special variant, that dominates in western and northern Germany and the Amsterdam School in the Netherlands .The term \"Expressionist architecture\" initially described the activity of the German, Dutch, Austrian, Czech and Danish avant garde from 1910 until 1930. Subsequent redefinitions extended the term backwards to 1905 and also widened it to encompass the rest of Europe. Today the meaning has broadened even further to refer to architecture of any date or location that exhibits some of the qualities of the original movement such as; distortion, fragmentation or the communication of violent or overstressed emotion.The style was characterised by an early-modernist adoption of novel materials, formal innovation, and very unusual massing, sometimes inspired by natural biomorphic forms, sometimes by the new technical possibilities offered by the mass production of brick, steel and especially glass. Many expressionist architects fought in World War I and their experiences, combined with the political turmoil and social upheaval that followed the German Revolution of 1919, resulted in a utopian outlook and a romantic socialist agenda. Economic conditions severely limited the number of built commissions between 1914 and the mid-1920s, resulting in many of the most important expressionist works remaining as projects on paper, such as Bruno Taut's Alpine Architecture and Hermann Finsterlin's Formspiels. Ephemeral exhibition buildings were numerous and highly significant during this period. Scenography for theatre and films provided another outlet for the expressionist imagination, and provided supplemental incomes for designers attempting to challenge conventions in a harsh economicate.Important events in expressionist architecture include; the Werkbund Exhibition (1914) in Cologne, the completion and theatrical running of the Grosses Schauspielhaus, Berlin in 1919, the Glass Chain letters, and the activities of the Amsterdam School. The major permanent extant landmark of Expressionism is Erich Mendelsohn's Einstein Tower in Potsdam. By 1925 most of the leading architects of Expressionism such as; Bruno Taut, Erich Mendelsohn, Walter Gropius, Mies van der Rohe and Hans Poelzig, along with other Expressionists in the visual arts, had turned toward the Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity) movement, a more practical and matter-of-fact approach which rejected the emotional agitation of expressionism. A few, notably Hans Scharoun, continued to work in an expressionist idiom.In 1933, after the Nazi seizure of power in Germany, expressionist art was outlawed as degenerate. Until the 1970s scholars commonly played down the influence of the expressionists on the later International style, but this has been re-evaluated in recent years.".
- Expressionist_architecture thumbnail The_Sydney_Opera_House_at_dusk.jpg?width=300.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink amsterdamschip.html.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink 0354-60551131003A.pdf.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink 0354-60551234014A.pdf.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink 1526381043320796;jsessionid=n_5xJRMLsgMegIOfxT.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink german-expressionist-architecture.html.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageID "5016265".
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageLength "49884".
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageOutDegree "433".
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageRevisionID "704421344".
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1900_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1905_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1907_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1908_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1909_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1910_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1911_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1912_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1913_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1914_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1915_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1917_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1918_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1919_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1920_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1921_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1922_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1923_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1924_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1925_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1926_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1927_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1928_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1930_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1931_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1933_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1937_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1940_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1950_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink 1960_in_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Aboriginal_peoples_in_Canada.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Adolf_Behne.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Adolf_Loos.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Adolf_Meyer_(architect).
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Aesthetics.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Alfeld.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Alvar_Aalto.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Amsterdam.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Amsterdam_School.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Egyptian_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greek_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Roman_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Antoni_Gaudí.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Antonio_SantElia.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Anzeiger-Hochhaus.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Arbeitsrat_für_Kunst.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Architecture_of_India.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Art_Deco.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Art_Nouveau.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Schopenhauer.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Artisan.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Arts_and_Crafts_movement.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Auditorio_de_Tenerife.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Barcelona.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Basil_Al_Bayati.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Bauhaus.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Berlin.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Berlin_Philharmonic.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Berlin_secession_exhibition.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Bernhard_Hoetger.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Biomorphism.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Blobitecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Brick.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Brick_Expressionism.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Bruno_Taut.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Brutalist_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Béton_brut.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Canary_Islands.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Jung.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Krayl.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Casa_Milà.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_architectural_styles.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Architectural_history.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Architectural_styles.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Expressionist_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Modernism.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Darwin.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Rennie_Mackintosh.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Chemnitz.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Chilehaus.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Classical_architecture.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Clinker_brick.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Cologne.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Concept.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Congrxc3xa8s_International_dArchitecture_Moderne.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Constructivism_(art).
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Dada.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Daniel_Libeskind.
- Expressionist_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Dawes_Plan.