Description: A Monograph on the Berkeley Modernist, a talented German emigre who built numerous residences in the East Bay hills from the 40's through the 60's. Type and layout by Jack Stauffacher. Very good to fine condition with some very minor stains on front cover, clean copy. 79 pp. Many full page B&W photos. Condition is VG+ with Very little signs of wear. A superior copy. Born in Berlin in 1913 to an upper middle-class Jewish family, John Hans Ostwald earned a law degree in Vienna, studied briefly at the London School of Economics, became an accomplished pianist, and received a degree in architecture in Zurich. He arrived in San Francisco with his wife Rosemarie in 1939 and was hired by his father-in-laws schoolmate, Richard Neutra. Ostwald was a modernist, often guided by a woodsy Swiss functionalist aesthetic. Working from a building of his own design on Shattuck Ave., his major works in Berkeley include the Bancroft Center (2560 Bancroft Way), the South Branch Library (demolished), and many residential projects. His final project, the posthumously built St. Johns Presbyterian Church (2727 College Ave.) was designed in collaboration with his younger partner E. Paul Kelly. Although affected by modernism, especially the International Style, Ostwald was uncomfortable with a starkly abstract aesthetic. He resisted a set design style, preferring to accommodate to the particular way of life, sensibility, and aspirations of each client. In the 1963 Spiller house (9 North Ridgewood, Kent Woodlands) large rugged beams come together above a massive, central, free-standing concrete fireplace opening on to several side spaces reminiscent of Frank Lloyd Wrights Wingspread. By contrast, the Lowenfeld house (2928 Avalon Ave.), designed a few years earlier, has a quiet restrained formalism. As a cultured European, Ostwalds world view was broader than that of many of his contemporaries. This influenced his sense of the architects role in civic and educational matters. An active member of the Sierra Club, in the mid-60s he was a design lecturer at UC Extension and the College of Environmental Design. He also participated in the City of Berkeleys Code Review Committee and was largely responsible for the Citys Sign Ordinance. Ostwald was a member of the Civic Art Commission, and the Design Review Committee, and was frequently a speaker on environmental and educational issues in Berkeley.
Price: 250 USD
Location: San Francisco, California
End Time: 2024-12-02T19:37:38.000Z
Shipping Cost: 5.38 USD
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Topic: Architecture
Binding: Hardcover
Place of Publication: San Francisco
Signed: No
Publisher: The Greenwood Press
Subject: Art & Photography
Original/Facsimile: Original
Year Printed: 1975
Language: English
Special Attributes: 1st Edition, Illustrated
Author: Reay and Paret
Personalized: No
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Character Family: no