Jan Kotěra

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Jan Kotěra
1923 portrait by Vladimír Jindřich Bufka
Born18 December 1871
Died17 April 1923(1923-04-17) (aged 51)
NationalityCzech
Known forArchitecture

Jan Kotěra (18 December 1871 – 17 April 1923) was a Czech architect, artist and interior designer, and one of the key figures of modern architecture in Bohemia.

Biography

Kotěra was born in Brno, the largest city in Moravia, to a Czech father and German-speaking mother. He studied architecture in Vienna during the waning days of the Austro-Hungarian Empire under the Viennese master Otto Wagner.[1]

Kotěra returned to Prague in 1897 to help found a dynamic movement of Czech nationalist artists and architects centered on the Mánes Union of Fine Arts. Strongly influenced by the work of the Vienna Secession, his work bridged late nineteenth-century architectural design and early modernism. Kotěra collaborated with Czech sculptors Jan Štursa, Stanislav Sucharda, and Stanislav's son Vojtěch Sucharda on a number of buildings.

As a teacher, Kotěra trained a generation of Czech architects, including

Bata shoe factory at East Tilbury, Essex, England.[2]
These are considered Modernist landmarks of industry and a company town.

Works

Gallery

  • Museum of Eastern Bohemia, Hradec Králové.
    Museum of Eastern Bohemia, Hradec Králové.
  • Národní dům (National House), Prostějov.
    Národní dům (National House), Prostějov.
  • Baťa's villa, Zlín.
    Baťa's villa, Zlín.
  • Faculty of Law, Prague.
    Faculty of Law, Prague.
  • Bust in Prague.
    Bust in Prague.

References

External links