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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paul Troost
Born(1878-08-17)August 17, 1878
DiedJanuary 21, 1934(1934-01-21) (aged 55)
NationalityGerman
Alma materTechnische Universität Darmstadt
OccupationArchitect
SpouseGerdy Troost

Paul Ludwig Troost (17 August 1878 – 21 January 1934)[1][2] was a German architect. A favourite master builder of Adolf Hitler from 1930, his Neoclassical designs for the Führerbau and the Haus der Kunst in Munich influenced the style of Nazi architecture.

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  • Troost, House of German Art and the Entartete Kunst exhibition

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SPEAKER 1: We're standing in Munich looking at the House of Art, which was once called the House of German Art. SPEAKER 2: It was built for Adolf Hitler, and was a place to promote a very specific idea of German art. SPEAKER 1: This is thought to be the very first building that Hitler had commissioned for the Nazi state, and this was to be the first of many buildings they were to be constructed around the nation that were the embodiment of National Socialist ideology. SPEAKER 2: As we look at this building, it's hard not to notice that the Nazis were drawing on the classical tradition of ancient Greek and Roman architecture. SPEAKER 1: Yes. But by way of 19th century classical revival traditions, especially in Germany, we might think of the work of Schinkel, up in Prussia, in Berlin, especially, and we might think of the work of Klenze, here in Munich. These were artists that took the ancient tradition and appropriated them for their age. This building is a little bit different. It is even more spare. It is even more stripped down. But we can see this long door colonnade on either side, giving a sense of order and power. SPEAKER 2: And I think timelessness is another words that we should use about this architecture. There was an aspiration toward the eternal, or timelessness-- that ancient Greek architecture stood for those very values that the Nazis wanted to embody, as opposed to what they considered degenerate art, or sickly, unhealthy art, that was actually exhibited just a few blocks away. SPEAKER 1: There were two major exhibitions of art that were opened in 1937 that were meant to be seen in opposition to each other, and they were only about a block and a half from each other. The Great Exhibition of German Art opened here, at the House of German Art. But then in a temporary exhibition space was the first iteration of the Entartete Kunft Exhibition, the Degenerate Art Exhibition. SPEAKER 2: We use that word "degenerate," and what it really meant for the Nazis was an art that was sickly and unhealthy-- the art that today we hold as most dear. If you go to modern art museums, you'll be looking at the art the Nazis considered "degenerate"-- artist like Schmidt Rottluff or Paul Klee or Max Ernst, Kirchner. All of the great early modernists. And those artists were drawing on so-called primitive art. They deformed the human body. They used extreme colors. They distorted space. These were all things that Hitler rejected. He was looking for an art that was ideal and beautiful and perfect, and that represented a kind of timelessness. SPEAKER 1: So this architecture and the art that it was meant to house were tied up in National Socialist ideology. Germany had gone through a very rapid industrialization. And the National Socialists, the Nazis, looked back to a kind of invented agrarian past that they romanticized. And so the contemporary ills that came with industrialization, that came with urbanization, were vilified. And art that was representative of those changes, a kind of international character, a kind of risk taking-- all of the aspects that we associate with modern art-- is something that was vilified. And this building was built specifically as a kind of antidote. SPEAKER 2: And you could say that another aspect of modern art is that it's constantly changing. There's Cubism and Futurism and Dadaism and all of these movements, always trying to stay contemporary as opposed to what Hitler was wanting for the Third Reich, which was timeless. SPEAKER 1: In fact, Hitler spoke to this directly. SPEAKER 2: In the speech that Hitler gave on the opening of the first exhibition, he said, "Until the moment when national socialism took power, there existed in Germany a so-called 'modern art.' That is, to be sure, almost every year, another one. National Socialist Germany, however, wants, again, a German art." So when Hitler says, "a German art," make no mistake. What he means by that is eradicating another kind of art and denying those artists the ability to make art, sending some of them off to concentration camps. The artist whose work appears on the cover the Entartete Kunst exhibition was sent to a concentration camp and murdered. This was serious, frightening propaganda. SPEAKER 1: So the kind of art that was being exhibited here was really an art of exclusion, and it was really a kind of propaganda. And it reminds us of just how powerful the visual arts can be as a tool of the state. And the person who embodies this most is a man named Adolf Ziegler, who was a painter, and the man responsible for putting together the first exhibition of great German art here in the House of German Art, and also organizing the Entartete Kunst exhibition. And Ziegler was a favorite of Adolf Hitler. In fact, his painting, The Four Elements, was hung in the Reich's chancellery, in Hitler's own office in Berlin. Characteristic of Ziegler's work and characteristic of much of the painting and sculpture that was exhibited in this first exhibition in the House of German Art is a classicism-- we see an emphasis on eternal properties, like the four elements, like the four seasons. And we see an emphasis on a particularity and a kind of hyper-clarity that we might associate with 15th century northern art. SPEAKER 2: And the art that was exhibited in the degenerate art exhibition was hung with art by people who were mentally and physically handicapped. So that was art that was associated with all that the Nazis were eradicating-- literally murdering. SPEAKER 1: And it was wildly popular. Estimates put the attendance to the Entartete Kunst exhibition between two and three million people. And you know what? Even now, in the beginning of the 21st century, there is still real controversy about modernism. People still get upset. And I think it's important to understand our uncomfortableness, but also the kind of historical dimensions by which intolerance of art can become dangerous. SPEAKER 2: Very dangerous. Maybe this is a good time to read a little bit more from Hitler's speech at the inauguration of that first exhibition. "Art can, in no way, be a fashion. As little as the character in the blood of our people will change, so much will art have to lose its moral character and replace it with worthy images, expressing the life course of our people. Cubism, Dadaism, Futurism, Impressionism have nothing to do with our German people. I will therefore confess now, in this very hour, that I have come to the final, inalterable decision, to clean house-- just as I have done in the domain of political confusion-- and, from now on, rid the German art life of it's phase-mongering." Those are chilling words. SPEAKER 1: And, of course, Hitler did with people what he also did with the art. SPEAKER 2: It's interesting to note that the motto of the Austrian avant-garde-- and Hitler was, after all, Austrian. SPEAKER 1: And he was a would-be artist. SPEAKER 2: The motto was, "to each age its art, and to art it's freedom"-- the very opposite of the ideals that Hitler was trying to promote.

Life

Early career

Born in Elberfeld in the Rhineland, Troost attended the Technical College of Darmstadt and, upon finishing his course, worked with Martin Dülfer in Munich beginning in 1920. He then qualified as a university lecturer.[3] In the 1920s, he opened his own architectural office and became a member of the modernist Deutscher Werkbund association. Troost designed several rooms of Cecilienhof Palace in Potsdam. After a trip to the United States in 1922, he designed steamship décor for the Norddeutscher Lloyd shipping company before World War I, and the fittings for transatlantic liners in a style that combined Spartan traditionalism with elements of modernity. He was in charge of design for all of the company's largest ships, such as SS Europa, SS Berlin, SS München, and SS Homeric, until 1929.[3]

An extremely tall, spare-looking, reserved Westphalian with a close-shaven head, Troost belonged to a school of architects like Peter Behrens and Walter Gropius who, even before 1914, reacted sharply against the highly ornamental Jugendstil movement and advocated a restrained, lean architectural approach, almost devoid of ornament.

Hitler

Troost and Hitler first met in 1929, through the Nazi publisher Hugo Bruckmann and his wife Elsa.[3] Although before 1933 he did not belong to the leading group of German architects, Troost became Hitler's foremost architect whose neo-classical style became for a time the official architecture of the Third Reich. His work filled Hitler with enthusiasm, and he planned and built state and municipal edifices throughout Germany.

Haus der Kunst in 2009

Hitler commissioned Troost to convert the Barlow Palais in Munich into the headquarters of the Nazi Party, the "Brown House",[3] decorating it in a heavy, anti-modernist style under Hitler's supervision.

In the autumn of 1933, he was commissioned to rebuild and refurnish Hitler's dwellings in the Reich Chancellery in Berlin.[4] Along with other architects like Ludwig Ruff, Troost planned and built State and municipal edifices throughout the country, including new administrative offices, social buildings for workers and bridges across the main highways. One of the many structures he planned before his death was the Haus der Deutschen Kunst ("House of German Art") in Munich,[5] modeled on Schinkel's Altes Museum in Berlin. The museum was constructed from 1933 to 1937 following Troost's plans, and was Nazi Germany's first monumental structure of Nazi architecture.[6] Hitler intended it to be a great temple for a "true, eternal art of the German people". It was a good example of the imitation of classical forms in monumental public buildings during the Third Reich, though subsequently Hitler moved away from the more restrained style of Troost, reverting to the more elaborate imperial grandeur that he had admired in the 19th century Vienna Ring Road (Ringstraße) boulevard of his youth.

Troost also redesigned Königsplatz in Munich to include new Nazi Party buildings and a "Temple of Honour".[3]

Hitler's relationship to Troost was that of a pupil to an admired teacher. According to Albert Speer, who later became Hitler's favorite architect, the Führer would impatiently greet Troost with the words: "I can't wait, Herr Professor. Is there anything new? Let's see it!" Troost would then lay out his latest plans and sketches. Hitler frequently declared, according to Speer, that "he first learned what architecture was from Troost"'. The architect's death on 21 January 1934, after a severe illness, was a painful blow, but Hitler remained close to his widow Gerdy Troost, whose architectural taste frequently coincided with his own, which made her (in Speer's words) "a kind of arbiter of art in Munich".

Death

Troost died on 21 January 1934 at the age of 55.[3] Hitler posthumously awarded him the German National Prize for Art and Science in 1937. He was buried in the Munich Nordfriedhof (Northern Cemetery). The gravestone still survives.

See also

References

  1. ^ Speer, Albert (1970) Inside the Third Reich New York: Simon and Schuster. p.49
  2. ^ Kellerhoff, Sven Felix (2004) The Führer Bunker: Hitler's Last Refuge. Berlin: Story Verlag. p.38
  3. ^ a b c d e f Joachimsthaler, Anton (1996). The Last Days of Hitler: The Legends, the Evidence, the Truth. Translated by Helmut Bölger. London: Arms and Armour. p. 237 n.31. ISBN 1-85409-380-0.
  4. ^ Seligmann, Matthew; Davison, John; and McDonald, John (2003). Daily Life in Hitler's Germany, p. 96. London: The Brown Reference Group plc. ISBN 0-312-32811-7.
  5. ^ Zalampas, Sherree Owens (1990). Adolf Hitler: A Psychological Interpretation of His Views on Architecture, Art and Music, p. 76. Bowling Green State University Popular Press. ISBN 0-87972-488-9.
  6. ^ Hickley, Catherine (March 1, 2017), Should Munich contemporary art museum reveal or obscure its Nazi history? The Art Newspaper

External links

This page was last edited on 24 March 2023, at 16:17
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