German Bestelmeyer
German Bestelmeyer (1874-1942) was one of Adolph Hitler's architects. During the Third Reich mere opposition to Bauhaus architecture was enough to gain official approval for almost any architect, as with German Bestelmeyer. A member of the Munich School to which Paul Troost also belonged, he had been trained under Theodor Fischer. He was praised by Paul Schultze-Naumburg in a lecture in 1931, because he aligned himself with supporters of traditional styles. In 1934, he became head of the Munich Academy of Art to which he enlisted Alexander von Senger, the passionate opponent of Bolshevik architecture. Later, Bestelmeyer designed the Luftwaffe office building on the Prinzregentenstrasse in Munich. This traditional building and his other works were singled out for praise in the later thirties. An article he wrote in 1934 sums up his ideas and probably drew the approval of Nazis. Admiring von Senger's criticism of Le Corbusier, he found that, in the twenties architecture was petrifying into mere architectural technology, creating souless buildings. The flat roof, he said was simply not practical for Germany's climate. His 1928 alliance with Schultze-Naumburg, Schmittehenner and others into "The Block", a group of architects determined to combat the experiment of the Bauhaus made him accptable.
Related Topics:
1874 - 1942 - Adolph Hitler - Architect - Third Reich - Bauhaus - Paul Troost - Theodor Fischer - Paul Schultze-Naumburg - 1931 - 1934 - Munich Academy of Art - Alexander von Senger - Bolshevik - Luftwaffe - Prinzregentenstrasse - Munich - Thirties - Nazis - Le Corbusier - Twenties - 1928
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