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Otto Wagner
Otto Wagner
[Otto Koloman Wagner]
* Vienna [Wien], Impero Austriaco [Kaisertum-Österreich], 13 Luglio 1841
+ Vienna [Wien], Impero Austro-Ungarico [Österreichisch-Ungarische Monarchie], 11 Aprile 1918
nazionalità: austriaca
Wagner:Werk
Museum Postsparkasse
Georg Coch-Platz 2
1018 Wien - Austria [Österreich]
Tel: +43.1.534.53.33088 - Fax: +43.1.534.53.33088
www.ottowagner.com
museum@ottowagner.com
OPERE
 
1912 - 1913
Austria [Österreich] » Vienna [Wien]
1903 - 1912
Austria [Österreich] » Vienna [Wien]
1903 - 1907
Austria [Österreich] » Vienna [Wien]
1898 - 1902
Austria [Österreich] » Vienna [Wien]
1898 - 1899
Austria [Österreich] » Vienna [Wien]
1899
Austria [Österreich] » Vienna [Wien]
1894 - 1898
Austria [Österreich] » Vienna [Wien]
1894 - 1898
Austria [Österreich] » Vienna [Wien]
1894 - 1898
Stadtbahnstation Karlsplatz
Austria [Österreich] » Vienna [Wien]
1886 - 1888
Austria [Österreich] » Vienna [Wien]
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BIBLIOGRAFIA
 
SCRITTI SULL'AUTORE
August Sarnitz, Otto Wagner. 1841–1918. Wegbereiter der modernen Architektur, Taschen, Köln 2005
Werner Oechslin, Wagner, Loos e l'evoluzione dell'architettura moderna, Skira, 2003
Aurora Cuito, Cristina Montes, Otto Wagner, Te Neues, Düsseldorf 2002
Mary P. A. Sheaffer, Otto Wagner. Tradition und Moderne. Seine Bauwerke in neun Touren, Compress, Wien 1997
Peter Mertz (photo), Otto Wagner und Wien. Seine Bauten heute, Harenberg-Edition, Dortmund 1995
Otto Antonia Graf, Otto Wagner. Das Werk des Architekten 1860-1918, Bölhau, Wien 1994
Harry Mallgrave (ed.), Otto Wagner. Reflections on the Raiment of Modernity, Getty Center for the History of Art and the Humanities, Santa Monica 1993
Robert Trevisiol, Otto Wagner, Editori Laterza, "Guide all'architettrua moderna", 1990
Heinz Geretsegger, Max Peintner, Otto Wagner. Unbegrenzte Großstadt. Beginn der modernen Architektur, Residenz, Salzburg 1964
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MOSTRE
 
 
Carlo Scarpa / Sekiya Masaaki. Tracce d’architettura nel mondo di un fotografo giapponese / Traces of architecture in the world of a Japanese photographer, Treviso (Italy), Ca' Scarpa, 15 april / 16 july 2023

Carlo Scarpa, Sekiya Masaaki, Tracce d’architettura nel mondo di un fotografo giapponese, Traces of architecture in the world of a Japanese photographer, Treviso Carlo Scarpa's work captured and interpreted by Sekiya Masaaki, but also architecture itself as included in the Japanese photographer's world of images.

It is around these two positions that the Carlo Scarpa / Sekiya Masaaki exhibition revolves. Traces of architecture in the world of a Japanese photographer, the photographic exhibition, organised by the Fondazione Benetton Studi Ricerche and curated by J.K. Mauro Pierconti, an architectural historian, which will be inaugurated on Friday 14 April at 6 p.m. and will remain open until Sunday 16 July at Ca' Scarpa in Treviso, one of the exhibition venues of the Fondazione Benetton and for which J. K. Mauro Pierconti is curator.

Carlo Scarpa, Sekiya Masaaki, Tracce d’architettura nel mondo di un fotografo giapponese, Traces of architecture in the world of a Japanese photographer, TrevisoTherefore, Carlo Scarpa (1906-1978) and Sekiya Masaaki (1942-2002). But not only that. Sekiya's professional career has gone through various phases, all centred around photography: from being an architectural photographer to an architectural design consultant, to becoming a promoter of talented photographers who were unknown and therefore needed support and publicity. And the exhibition will also account for these aspects of his work.

The exhibition brings together 85 photographs, 54 in colour and 31 in black and white, and is divided into four sections, distributed over the various floors of Ca' Scarpa, a space recently restored by architect Tobia Scarpa from a monastic church that once stood in the heart of the city of Treviso. Here a large metal structure, already present inside the building, was recovered and reused to divide the internal volume into four equal and independent floors, served by a new suspended staircase.

The first section, on the ground floor, collects large images representing Sekiya Masaaki's activity as a promoter of talented photographers. An example of this is Hattori Aiko, a street photographer, who did a series of reportages on life in Tōkyō in the 1980s. Two themes are addressed by the photographer: the world of youth, portrayed in its expressions and exuberance, and that of work, serious and rigorous. Two realities often considered polar opposites, but equally bearers of energy, vitality and solidarity. And the theatre of many of their adventures is, indeed, the street. These are unpublished images, found in Sekiya's archive, with the immediacy and vividness of this type of photograph: the large panels on display have an immediate impact, capturing the eye and at the same time marking the path of the exhibition, which meanders between the exhibition structures, leading to the discovery, on the back of those large prints, of the photographs in their original format: a double stamp, therefore; and a double path. The viewer is thus led to immerse themself in those images, where each one tells a story, represents lives, without the need for words or text.

The large staircase acts as a dividing and separating element between different and successive sections.

Carlo Scarpa, Sekiya Masaaki, Tracce d’architettura nel mondo di un fotografo giapponese, Traces of architecture in the world of a Japanese photographer, TrevisoOn the first floor are the second and third sections of the exhibition, devoted to Sekiya's work as an architectural photographer.
The second section displays a selection of shots from his first photographic work, the one on the ruins of Angkor Wat in Cambodia, taken when he was still a university student. The photographs are almost all black and white. The work is aimed at excavating those ruins consumed by time and devoured by the forest: remnants of a lost world that, through our gaze, powerfully return to life.

The third section is dedicated to the most comprehensive and important work of Sekiya's entire career in this field: the monographic work on Otto Wagner in Vienna, published in 1998. The quality of the work, the technical clarity (exposure, contrast, focus), the willingness and intellectual finesse expressed through the framing of the shots emerge in the succession of shots, from the choice of details, even taken using cranes in times when drones did not exist. In this way, Sekiya provides us with completely surprising views of Wagner's large buildings, such as the residences on the Linke Weinzeile or an aerial view of St. Leopold's church 'am Steinhof'.

The last two floors, where the fourth section of the exhibition unfolds, are instead dedicated to the work of Carlo Scarpa, the work that engaged Sekiya until his death in 2002, thus unfinished and fragmentary. In fact, Sekiya fails to capture the entire oeuvre of the Venetian architect. Yet, in his archive there are several thousand photographic plates, well over a thousand for the Brion Tomb alone, taken in successive campaigns.
The thousands of photographs thus reveal once again his way of working, made up of shooting campaigns, followed by a long process of correction and selection, and then by new shoots and new corrections: a process of continuous refinement and progressive selection that, while on the one hand seeks to capture and retain the changing weather and seasons, on the other strives to precisely define the parameters of exposure and the cut of the shot. These photographs offer the opportunity to reflect on Carlo Scarpa's work once again and, at the same time, the exhibition aims to show visitors a selection - the broadest possible - of Sekiya's shots, some of which are also screened on the top floor of Ca' Scarpa.
The incompleteness, in fact, in no way detracts from the interest and stimulus that these photographs provoke to look at the richness of the architectural work with renewed eyes, as confirmed by the book created for the exhibition: Carlo Scarpa / Sekiya Masaaki. Tracce d’architettura nel mondo di un fotografo giapponese / Traces of architecture in the world of a Japanese photographer (Fondazione Benetton Studi Ricerche-Antiga Edizioni).

Regarding the latter work, Luigi Latini, director of the Fondazione Benetton Studi Ricerche, states: "The editorial work of the Fondazione Benetton sees for the first time, with this book, the appearance of a work that focuses on the figure of Carlo Scarpa, investigated through the eyes of Japanese photographer Sekiya Masaaki. The name of Carlo Scarpa has always accompanied the life and image of the Foundation, exercising a role of stimulus, inspiration and also warning for anyone wishing to venture into both the world of the garden and landscape, taking on the gaze of one who knew how to interpret its forms and meanings. And it is precisely around this word, - landscape -, that the Foundation's research and fieldwork has revolved for over thirty years. The book is in many ways a useful tool, undoubtedly a critical and operative contribution to the field of studies on Carlo Scarpa, but also a step beyond the Foundation's previous editorial work which, on this front, over a period of thirty years, has produced a substantial series of volumes linked to the various editions of the International Carlo Scarpa Garden Prize, the prize for a place in the world, promoted and organised by the Foundation".

With this exhibition, says J. K. Mauro Pierconti, "after the cultural programmes that have contributed to fostering the Foundation's activities since last year, a further thread is starting to consolidate the presence of Ca' Scarpa within the city of Treviso, with other exhibitions, books, public lectures, and with a new space that is being set up and that, under the name of Ca' Scarpa Archivi Ricerche, is destined to house Carlo Scarpa's personal library with a donation from his son Tobia".
Otto Wagner, k.u.k., Hofgartendirektion, World Exhibition, Paris, 1900Otto Wagner. Maître de l'Art nouveau viennois, Paris, Cité de l'architecture & du patrimoine, Galerie haute des expositions temporaires, 13 november 2019 / 16 march 2020

This is the first exhibition in France dedicated solely to Otto Wagner. It shows him as a globally significant architect at the turn of the twentieth century and as the leading representative of modernism whose work continues to have an effect on Austrian politics, economics, and society today.

The exhibition not only focused on a fascinating artistic figure and his work but demonstrated the striking relevance of fundamental questions raised by Wagner: from the cultural status of architecture and art in city planning to a systematic connection between rigid functionality, the highest quality, and a sublime aesthetic – from the fork to the city.

image:
Otto Wagner, exhibition object of the k.u.k. Hofgartendirektion at the World Exhibition in Paris 1900
© Wien Museum
Post Otto Wagner. Von der Postsparkasse zur Postmoderne / From the Postal Savings Bank to Post-Modernism, Vienna [Wien], MAK, 30 may / 30 september 2018
Josef Hoffmann - Otto Wagner. On the Use and Effect of Architecture, Brtnice (Czech Republic), Josef Hoffmann Museum, 24 may 2017 / 6 may 2018
 
 
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