Ossip Klarwein

Ossip (Yosef) Klarwein

Ossip (Yosef) Klarwein next to model of Knesset, 1957
Native name יוסף קלארווין
Born Ossip Klarwein
(1893-02-06)6 February 1893
Warsaw, Poland
Died 9 September 1970(1970-09-09) (aged 77)
Jerusalem, Israel
Nationality German-Israeli
Occupation Architect
Children Mati Klarwein

Ossip (Yosef) Klarwein (6 February 1893 — 9 September 1970) was a Polish-born German-Israeli architect who designed many works in Germany and Israel. Between 1921 and 1933 he was employed with Johann Friedrich Höger, and became chief design architect. Klarwein was an important representative of Northern German Brick Expressionism and of modern architecture in Israel.[1]:294

Life

Germany

Klarwein was born in Warsaw, Poland. His father Menachem Klarwein was a Hebrew teacher and a Zionist. As Jews, the family immigrated to Germany because of the growing anti-Semitism in Poland and Russia after the failed revolution of 1905 in the Russian Empire.[1]:294 Klarwein studied architecture at the Technical University of Munich from 1917-1919, but he was not awarded a university degree.[1]:294 In 1920, he studied with Hans Poelzig in the master's studio for architecture of the Prussian Academy of Arts in Berlin.[1]:294 In 1921, Klarwein joined the architectural firm of Fritz Hoger in Hamburg.[1]:294 Hoger's office grew considerably in these years with increasing work orders, requiring additional personnel.[2] Klarwein's designs were at the time published under Hoger's name.[3] Hoger said that Klarwein was "one of the very best" employees.[2]

Palestine / Israel

Binjan haQranot (בנין הקרנות) in Haifa, 1935-1937 by Klarwein

In 1934, Klarwein emigrated with his non-Jewish wife Elsa (born Kühne), an opera singer, and his son Mati during the Fifth Aliyah to the British Mandate of Palestine, because they saw no future in Germany.[1]:295 Klarwein changed his first name from the Slavic name variant Ossip to the Hebrew form Yosseph.[1]:295 In Haifa, Klarwein became an independent architect.[1]:295

Most of his works are public and commercial buildings, as well as development plans for cities and neighborhoods scattered throughout Israel. Klarwein's original design for the Knesset building unanimously won the 1957 architecture competition, and he continued to work on the project until completion, but some modifications were made to the plans.[4] He designed with Richard Kauffmann and Heinz Rau, the campus of the Hebrew University.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Myra Warhaftig (Hebrew: מירה ווארהפטיג): They laid the foundation stone. German-Jewish architect's life and work in Palestine 1918-1948. Wasmuth, Berlin / Tübingen 1996, ISBN 3-8030-0171-4, P. 294-295. (de).
  2. 1 2 Susan (Sheila) Hattis Rolef: משכן הכנסת בגבעת רם: תכנון ובנייה. In: קתדרה, Band 96 (July 2000), English, "The Competition and its Results, mid-1956 to mid-1958", auf: Knesset English Homepage, retrieved 11 April 2015 .
  3. Ernst-Erik Pfannschmidt Brief an Eckhardt (Ekhart) Berckenhagen vom 29. Juni 1977 (PDF; 25 kB) at the time of the exhibition on the occasion of the 100th birthday of Hoger's in the Art Library of the National Museums in Berlin (in German).
  4. Susan Hattis Rolef. The Knesset Building - Architectural Highlights
  5. Lotte Cohn: Richard Kauffmann, Architect and City Planner. [Richard Kauffmann: Architekt und Stadtplaner (de.), Jerusalem: Brief an Bath-Scheva Kauffmann, 1978; English.], Monika Iacovacci (Übs.), auf: Richard Kauffmann: Architect and Town Planner – Biography, Retrieved 11 April 2015.

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