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Kurt Liebknecht

Kurt Liebknecht (sometimes Curt Liebknecht: 26 March 1905 – 6 January 1994) was a German architect. After 1937 he pursued his career as a Soviet architect,[1] except during a hiatus of eighteen months spent in a Soviet jail as a suspected spy.[2]

Kurt Liebknecht
Heinz Funck, 1954
Born
Otto Wilhelm Curt Liebknecht

(1905-03-26)26 March 1905
Died6 January 1994(1994-01-06) (aged 88)
EducationWöhler-Realgymnasium (Frankfurt a/M.)
Technical University of Berlin
Occupation(s)Architect
University administtrator
Politician
Spouse(s)1. ____
2. Lydia
3. Gisela
Children(at least 3)

Returning to Germany at the end of 1948, after the launch of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) in 1949 he became an important and influential member of the new country's artistic establishment during the 1950s and 1960s, both through his teaching work at the Berlin-based Bauakademie (college of building and architecture) and on account of his activities as an engaged member of the party. Between 1954 and 1963 he was a member of the powerful Party Central Committee, which under the highly centralised Leninist power structure in force in East Germany was the fulcrum of political power.[3]

Liebknecht's approach was influenced, over time, by contrasting currents in modern architecture, which taken together can be seen as remarkably ambivalent. During his early years he was powerfully influenced by the work of great twentieth century pioneers of modern architecture and urban planning, such as Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Hans Poelzig and Ernst May. Till the early 1930s he was close to he New Objectivity and Neue Bauen movements, or in Soviet terms Constructivism.[4] As the Stalin era unfolded and his career progressed in the Soviet Union his work was increasingly defined by "Socialist classicism", the architectural expression of Socialist realism That is the style he brought back to East Germany in 1948. This aligned with the political currents of the time, and it became remarkably ubiquitous in the postwar reconstruction architecture of the 1950s.[4]

Biography edit

Family provenance and early years edit

(Otto Wilhelm) Curt Liebknecht was born in Frankfurt am Main where Otto Liebknecht (1876–1949), his father, who had shunned the family tradition of political activism, worked with what became Degussa as an increasingly senior industrial chemist.[5][6] Otto Liebknecht (the father) has been identified in one source as "one of the pioneers of Persil ("Perborat-Silikat") washing powder". His mother, born Elsa Ernestine Friedland, was a pianist who had trained at the Berlin Conservatory: she came from a musical Jewish family.[7] However, it was Kurt Liebknecht's uncle, Karl Liebknecht, as one of the murdered founders of the Communist Party in postwar Germany, who left a larger footprint in the mainstream historical record than either of his parents.[8] Another of his father's brothers, Theodor Liebknecht, was also prominent in left-wing politics during and directly after the First World War.[9]

Liebknecht completed his schooling at the Wöhler-Realgymnasium (secondary school), passing his Abitur exam early in 1924, which opened the way to a university-level education.[2] First, however, he worked for around six months as a building worker and carpenter.[1] Later during 1924 he relocated to Berlin where between 1924 and 1929 he studied architecture at the Technical University ("Technische Universität Berlin").[2] His course provided for a period of practical study in 1927, during which he worked for the highly regarded architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.[2] In 1928 he won first prize in a student competition with his proposal for a public building in Malchin (near Rostock).[10] The next year he emerged with a "Diplom-Ingenieur" degree in architecture. Between 1929 and 1931 he was employed by the Hans Poelzig firm. One of his projects during his time as part of "Team Poelzig" was for the interior fitting out of Berlin's prestigious new Haus des Rundfunks (Broadcasting House).[11] This was followed a period working as a "Regierungsbauführer" (government buildings manager) working for the Free State of Prussia, after which he passed the government exams necessary to move up a notch, to the level of a "Regierungsbaumeister". In that position he headed up the construction of the "University Women's Clinic" ("Universitäts-Frauenklinik") in Berlin. Further work that he undertook between 1929 and the middle part of 1931, alongside involvement in city planning projects, tended to focus on the health care sector, especially on functional buildings, principally hospitals.[2]

Soviet Union edit

In August 1931 Liebknecht, finding himself unemployed with a heavily pregnant wife, relocated to the Soviet Union.[12] The backwash from the Wall Street Crash in October 1929 had been reflected in a cut back in new building in Germany, and it was possible to anticipate more and better opportunities for architects in Moscow than in Berlin.[2] He returned for visits to Berlin in 1932 and to Hamburg in 1933. However, the dramatic change of government in January 1933 meant that the creation of a hostile environment for Jews became a defining underpinning of government strategy in Germany. Kurt Liebknecht was the son of a Jewish mother which meant that in the eyes of the authorities he was a "half-Jew". It would also have counted against him that he came from one of Germany's most famous socialist dynasties. Between 1933 and 1948 Kurt Liebknecht stayed out of Nazi Germany.[3] His continuing professional success did not go unnoticed in Berlin, and after war between Europe's principal dictatorships erupted in 1941, Kurt Liebknecht's name appeared on the Gestapo "manhunt targets lists" ("Sonderfahndungsliste") of government opponents to be sought out and rounded up following a successful German invasion of the Soviet Union.[1]

In the Soviet Union Liebknecht was entrusted, over the years, with senior positions in respect of various government construction projects. Initially, during 1931/32, he worked for an international team around the city planner Ernst May. May had been heavily influenced by what is known in England as the Garden city movement, and in 1930 he had moved with virtually his entire "New Frankfurt" team from Frankfurt am Main to Moscow in order to support the Soviet Union's urban modernisation programme under the direction of powerful "building policy" committees of the ruling Communist Party.[2][4] Liebknecht was assigned to the so-called "Second May Group" under the leadership of another expatriate German architect, Werner Hebebrand: construction activity was focused on Moscow. Within the "Second May Group" Liebknecht was placed in charge of the "Hospitals Building Sub-group".[2] Alongside these assignments he teamed up with his Dutch colleague Marinus Gewin to enter a submission for an international competition held in 1931 involving plans (much touted but never implemented) for a Palace of the Soviets on the site of the demolished Cathedral of Christ the Saviour near the Moscow Kremlin.[2] By 1932, with some of the initial impetus from Ernst May's group projects, beginning to fade, Liebknecht switched to the "People's Commissariat for Health's Commission for Project Standards" ("Kommission für Projektierungsnormative des Volkskommissariats für Gesundheitswesen "). Then, starting in 1933, he worked for the "People's Commissariat for Transport and Communications" (" Volkskommissariat für Verkehrswesen und Verbindungswesen"), where he was responsible for the planning of clinics, along with residential and office developments in several important cities and towns, including Magnitogorsk and Stalinsk (as Novokuznetsk was known till 1961).[2][1][13] He was provided with a comfortable three room apartment just a few hundred meters from his Moscow office.[12]

Identified as a "deserving co-worker in the building of socialism in the Soviet Union", Kurt Liebknecht was given Soviet citizenship in 1937.[1] He moved into a small single floor house of the type normally provided to rail workers.[12] However, the next year he was caught up in the Stalinist Clean-up ("Большая чистка") – identified sometimes in western sources as the Great Terror. As part of the "Operation to take repressive measures against German national who are suspected of espionage against the Soviet Union" (NKVD Order Number 00439).[14] For two days, as he later testified under questioning, he was left naked in an empty cell without even a board on which to lie, after which an unconscious man was placed in the cell with him, followed by many more mangled individuals. In three interrogation session during June 1938 he sought to place the blame on others. Then, under torture, he accepted that he had become a spy. He remained in detention for more than a year.[12]

By 1939 many of the Germans who had fled to Moscow as refugees for reasons of race and/or political activism after 1933 had not survived the Stalinist purges. Kurt Liebknecht did survive. Sources speculate that his cousin Wilhelm Liebknecht, the son of his Uncle Karl, intervened on his behalf. Wilhelm Liebknecht, a lawyer like his father, had lived in Moscow since 1928, intervened with the authorities on behalf of a number of family members during the later 1930s and beyond, until he himself fell under suspicion and after 1941 was banished, with his family, to Uzbekistan.[12] Kurt Liebknecht was one of relatively few Germans in the Soviet Union to be fully rehabilitated in the aftermath of the purges, though he lived with the awareness that he was being constantly monitored and his luck might turn again. During the rest of his time in the Soviet Union he took care never to speak German for fear of raising suspicion.[12]

As part of his rehabilitation, at the end of 1939 Liebknecht took charge of the "Department of Health and Social Matters" at the "All Unions Academiy for Architecture" in Moscow. After the German invasion, which began in June 1941, he was mandated to work in collaboration with the Red army on plans for underground medical facilities.[2] As the German army advanced towards Moscow it became more important than ever that he always presented himself as a "loyal Soviet citizen". His architectural designs came with ever more "Russian national flourishes"[12] As the Germans came closer the entire "All Unions Academy" – including all its workers – was evactuated to Shymkent (Шымкент), an industrial city (with a rich cultural heritage) in Kazakhstan.[12] After the focus of the fighting turned, with disastrous results for the invaders, to Stalingrad, in 1943 Liebknecht was able to return to the Architecture Academy in Moscow.[12]

With the future defeat of Nazi Germany clearly on the horizon, in 1944 Kurt Liebknecht met with Wilhelm Pieck in Moscow in 1944. Pieck was the respected leader of the exiled German Communist Party and a senior representative of the Communist dominated National Committee for a Free Germany. Liebknecht was keen do discuss how he might contribute to the reconstruction of postwar Germany.[2] It can have done no damage to his future prospects that Liebknecht, while they were both still in Moscow, had written to and sought out the man who later became the president of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany): nevertheless, for two or three years following the war (which in Europe ended, formally, in May 1945) Liebknecht remained in Moscow, receiving a doctorate in June 1945 with a dissertation on hospital construction in Soviet Central Asia.[1]

In 1946 Kurt Liebknecht made his first visit back to Germany since 1933. Unlike most Germans returning from the Soviet Union he arrived by air. He left his Ukrainian-born first wife and his son behind in Moscow. By the time he returned to settle permanently in East Berlin he was accompanied by Lydia, his second wife, and their two small children.[12] During 1946/47 he was a freelance worker at the Soviet Information Office and a specialist contributor on building matters in the German language section of Radio Moscow which involved several further working visits to East Berlin.[1] He was much involved in negotiations for the establishment of an academy of building and architecture ("Bauakademie"), an academic institute that could define the theoretical principals for the massive reconstruction challenges ahead, and convert those principals into reality. During one of his visits, in July 1946, he himself was appointed deputy head of the newly opened Academy of Arts and humanities by the Soviet Military Administration that had been in charge of the Soviet occupation zone since the previous summer. He was also appointed secretary of the "Health facilities" department.[2] Meanwhile, in the Soviet Union in 1947, he completed plans for a major health clinic in Stalingrad.[1]

Soviet occupation zone edit

In 1948 Kurt Liebknecht settled in Berlin, at the heart of the Germany's Soviet occupation zone (although the city itself was divided into four separate military occupation zones, of which the Soviet zone, covering the eastern part of the city, was by far the largest). In the zone's destroyed cities the defining challenge involved adopting Soviet-Socialist construction principals for the massive rebuilding programme that was needed. Among the leading politicians, flown in from Moscow three years earlier, there was no one with the necessary expertise. From within Germany, even among the architects untainted by suspicion of National Socialist crimes, misdemeanours or sympathies, none had the necessary knowledge. So Kurt Liebknecht was installed in a succession of hugely influential positions by the Soviet Military. Firstly, within the Ministry for Reconstruction, he was made head of the "Institute for Urban Building and Construction" ("Institut für Städtebau und Hochbau"). Presidency of the "Bauakademie" would followed in 1951. The objective was to give the cities a "new Soviet face" to convey to the war-shattered populations the Kremlin vision for a new way of living. Wide street with space for parades or, where necessary, more serious troop deployments. In an echo of the fallen regime, the people must be "impressed" by the scale of public buildings. Old city centres with their winding alleys and little hidden courtyards, shops, banks, cafes and general stores were to be torn down. Boulevards which had once provided the stage sets for civic life and places for people to meet up should disappear and be replaced by empty yawning open spaces which could not easily be replaced. Early concepts of city life must be obliterated. Public space must become nationalised, visible and controllable.[12] Liebknecht was also co-opted to work with the German Economic Commission ("Deutsche Wirtschaftskommission"), an innocuously named organisation which formed the basis for a future government in the event that the direct control by the Soviet Military should ever be relaxed. Within the Commission Liebknecht served as head of the department responsible for administering building and constructions.[2]

German Democratic Republic edit

On 7 October 1949 the Soviet occupation zone was relaunched as the Soviet sponsored German Democratic Republic (East Germany) and Liebknecht's career in state-backed urban planning and architecture progressed further. He joined the party only in December 1949,[1] but his record in the Soviet Union evidently ensured that as far as the new state was concerned his political credentials were beyond reproach from the outset. Nevertheless, between 1950 and 1954 he undertook a fur year "distance learning" course with the Karx Marx Party [political] Academy.[1] Till 1951 Liebknecht retained his post as director at the "Institute for Urban Building and Construction" ("Institut für Städtebau und Hochbau"). During this time, as the leading East German expert on Soviet city construction, in April/May 1950, he spent seven week as part of a high-level government delegation to the Soviet Union, led by the Minister for Reconstruction, Lothar Bolz. The East Germans had the opportunity to inspect and study architectural precepts being applied in the "great socialist brother state", visiting Moscow, Kyiv, Stalingrad (as it was still known at the time) and Leningrad. Shortly after the delegation returned home the results of the visit were published in East Germany as the "16 principles of urban building" ("16 Grundsätze des Städtebaus“").[15] This set the pattern for numerous development and redevelopment schemes including, most prominently, the "Stalin-Alle" (formerly the "Große Frankfurter Straße", and since 1961 the "Karl-Marx-Allee") which, as a major boulevard development fit for a socialist future, became an important part of the government's propaganda repertoire.[12][16]

In 1950 Liebknecht undertook a research contract to analyse clinical facilities in the region administered till 1952 (and again after 1990) as the State of Brandenburg. In 1951 he was given a professorship at the "Hochschule für Baukunst" in Weimar,[1] although there are strong indications that his own contributions to the East German built environment took little account of the Bauhaus ideas which had inspired the institution, differently named, before 1933.[12][17] Meanwhile, the government gave him a lead role in the planning of the Bauakademie (college of building and architecture), set in the heart of East Berlin, which finally opened its doors in January 1951.[18] Kurt Liebknecht became its first president in April 1951.[18] As the director of the academy, around this time he issued a couple of papers concerning the artistic character of city architecture ("Kunstcharakter des Städtebaus") and on "national traditions" ("nationale Traditionen"): between them these did much to define the direction of the academic study of architecture in East Germany during the 1950s. His subsequent membership, starting in February 1951, of the artistic sciences council at the Ministry of Culture meant he was part of the nationalk leadership team.[1] He also held the post of acting head of the Architecture advisory council to the Council of Ministers.[1] Another government appointment came in 1952 when he joined the presudium of the "Society for foreign cultural links" ("Gesellschaft für kulturelle Verbindung mit dem Ausland").[1] In terms of the political hierarchy his most significant appointment came in 1954 when he became one of (at this stage) just 90 members of the Party Central Committee: he retained his membership till 1963.[19]

In some ways the death of Stalin marked the beginning of the end of Liebknecht's stellar career. He remained in post as president of the ""Bauakademie" till 1961, but never entirely came to terms with the emerging trends in architecture during the second half of the 1950s.[12] His successor at the Bauakademie was Gerhard Kosel (1909–2003),[12] who had also worked successfully as an architect in the Soviet Union, returning to East Germany, as the Krushchev era dawned, only in September 1954.[20] Liebknecht's career took a clear stumble in 1961 with his appointment as director at the "Institute for the theory and history of architecture" ("Institut für Theorie und Geschichte der Architektur"), which was clearly a significantly less influential position than the one from which he had retired.[19] He remained in that position for just after a year, following which he took on the rectorship at the newly founded "Technical Institute for Healthcare Building Construction" ("Instituts für Technologie der Gesundheitsbauten"), where he remained till his retirement in 1970.[2][19] After 1970 he continued to participate in committees at the "Bauakademie",[2] and even after 1972 for several years he took a leading role at the professional Association of East German architects (BdA), which had emerged in 1952 from the enforced splitting of the old Association of German Architects.[21] As a pensioner he continued to undertake freelance work.[1]

Kurt Liebknecht published his autobiography under the title "Mein bewegtes Leben" in 1986.[12][22] Some commentators feel that in it he rather glossed over some of the more brutal aspects of his time in the Soviet Union.[12]

Awards and honours (selection) edit

Output (selection) edit

  • Gesundheitsbau – Projektierung unter den Bedingungen Mittelasiens; Moskau 1945 (doctoral dissertation)
  • Fragen der deutschen Architektur und des Städtebaus; 1952 (as co-author)
  • Sowjetische Architektur; 1953 (as co-author)
  • Handbuch für Architektur; 1954 (as co-author)
  • Die nationalen Aufgaben der deutschen Architektur; Deutsche Bauakademie 1954
  • Architektur und Städtebau in der DDR; 1959 (as co-author)
  • Baupolitik und Bauwissenschaft in den ersten Jahren der DDR; Ost-Berlin 1980
  • Mein bewegtes Leben; autobiography, Verlag für Bauwesen, Ost-Berlin 1986, ISBN 3-345-00039-3

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Simone Hain; Peter Erler. "Liebknecht, Kurt * 26.3.1905, † 6.1.1994 Präsident der Bauakademie". Wer war wer in der DDR?. Ch. Links Verlag, Berlin & Bundesstiftung zur Aufarbeitung der SED-Diktatur, Berlin. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Antonela Saravanja (compiler) (12 December 2013). "Liebknecht, Kurt (Otto Wilhelm Curt)". Institut Kunst- und Baugeschichte/Fachgebiet Kunstgeschichte. Karlsruher Institut für Technologie. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  3. ^ a b "Kurzbiografie/ Geschichte der Institution". Kurt-Liebknecht-Archiv. Archiv der Akademie der Künste, Berlin. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  4. ^ a b c "Kalte Asche und Spucke". Der Spiegel (online). 22 August 1951. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  5. ^ "Otto Liebknecht, Chemiker". Der streitbare Forscher .... Chefchemiker des Forschungslabors der Deutschen Gold- und Silberscheide-Anstalt, der späteren Degussa AG. Evonik Industries AG, Essen. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  6. ^ Birgit Bertsch-Frank: Eine etwas ungewöhnliche Karriere. Otto Liebknecht; in Mechtild Wolf (Hrsg.): Immer eine Idee besser: Forscher und Erfinder der Degussa; Frankfurt am Main, Degussa AG 1998 (pp. 54–75)
  7. ^ "Liebknecht, Otto". Einer der Wegbereiter des Waschmittels „Persil“. Frankfurter Bürgerstiftung (Frankfurter Personenlexikon). Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  8. ^ "Liebknecht, Karl, geb. am 13 . 08 . 1871 in Leipzig". Datenbank der deutschen Parlamentsabgeordneten .... Basis: Parlamentsalmanache / Reichstagshandbücher 1867 – 1938. Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, München. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  9. ^ Ilse Fischer (1985). "Liebknecht, Theodor: sozialistischer Politiker, * 19.4.1870 Leipzig, † 6.1.1948 Brome-Altendorf (Niedersachsen)". Neue Deutsche Biographie. Historische Kommission bei der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften (HiKo), München. p. 504. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  10. ^ "Kurt Liebknecht". Europäisches Kultur- und Informationszentrum in Thüringen ("Via Regia"), Erfurt. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  11. ^ Boberg, Daniel (18 May 2018). "Geschichte des Haus des Rundfunks". Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Dr. Andreas Petersen (13 March 2019). Der Ueberlebende (The survivor). FISCHER E-Books. pp. 57–58. ISBN 978-3-10-491045-1. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  13. ^ Ivan Nevzgodin (2006). Revolutionizing Hospital Architecture: Experiments in the Soviet Union. University Medical Center Groningen. pp. 42–57. ISBN 90-5662-464-4. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  14. ^ Nikita Ochotin, Arsenij Roginskij: Zur Geschichte der „Deutschen Operation“ des NKVD 1937–1938. In: Hermann Weber, Ulrich Mählert (Hrsg.): Verbrechen im Namen der Idee. pp. 143–189 & 316–319 (First published in the Jahrbuch für Historische Kommunismusforschung. 2000/2001, pp. 89–125).
  15. ^ "Die "16 Grundsätze des Städtebaus"". Dresdner Nachkriegsarchitektur. Ostmodern, Dresden. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  16. ^ Corina Kolbe (31 August 2018). "Moskaus kleine Schwestern". Stalins Städte in der DDR .... Monumentale Straßen und Plätze, ganz wie in Stalins Sowjetunion – per Radikalumbau der Stadtzentren wollte die SED Macht demonstrieren. Viele Pläne der frühen DDR-Jahre blieben Makulatur. Der Spiegel (online). Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  17. ^ Manfred Sack (10 December 1976). "Feier ohne Fest". Die DDR erinnert sich an ein Stück deutscher Vergangenheit. Die Zeit (online). Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  18. ^ a b "Ministerium für Bauwesen Teil 1: Ministerium für Aufbau (1949–1958) .... Einleitung". Das Bundesarchiv, Koblenz. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  19. ^ a b c Siegfried Heimann (2014). Zur Biografie von Kurt Liebknecht. Ch. Links Verlag. pp. 35–40. ISBN 978-3-86153-804-2. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  20. ^ Simone Hain; Peter Erler. "Kosel, Gerhard * 18.2.1909, † 21.9.2003 Präsident der Bauakademie". Wer war wer in der DDR?. Ch. Links Verlag, Berlin & Bundesstiftung zur Aufarbeitung der SED-Diktatur, Berlin. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  21. ^ Stefanie Leibetseder (13 February 2017). "Zwischen Widerstand und Anpassung". Tobias Zervosen erzählt vom Niedergang des Architektenberufes zu DDR-Zeiten und seiner kurzen Blüte vor dem Mauerfall (book review). Institut für Neuere deutsche Literatur (literaturkritik.de), Marburg. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
  22. ^ Kurt Liebknecht. "Mein bewegtes Leben". VEB Verlag für Bauwesen, Berlin. pp. 190–191.

kurt, liebknecht, sometimes, curt, liebknecht, march, 1905, january, 1994, german, architect, after, 1937, pursued, career, soviet, architect, except, during, hiatus, eighteen, months, spent, soviet, jail, suspected, heinz, funck, 1954bornotto, wilhelm, curt, . Kurt Liebknecht sometimes Curt Liebknecht 26 March 1905 6 January 1994 was a German architect After 1937 he pursued his career as a Soviet architect 1 except during a hiatus of eighteen months spent in a Soviet jail as a suspected spy 2 Kurt LiebknechtHeinz Funck 1954BornOtto Wilhelm Curt Liebknecht 1905 03 26 26 March 1905Frankfurt am Main GermanyDied6 January 1994 1994 01 06 aged 88 Berlin GermanyEducationWohler Realgymnasium Frankfurt a M Technical University of BerlinOccupation s ArchitectUniversity administtratorPoliticianSpouse s 1 2 Lydia3 GiselaChildren at least 3 Returning to Germany at the end of 1948 after the launch of the German Democratic Republic East Germany in 1949 he became an important and influential member of the new country s artistic establishment during the 1950s and 1960s both through his teaching work at the Berlin based Bauakademie college of building and architecture and on account of his activities as an engaged member of the party Between 1954 and 1963 he was a member of the powerful Party Central Committee which under the highly centralised Leninist power structure in force in East Germany was the fulcrum of political power 3 Liebknecht s approach was influenced over time by contrasting currents in modern architecture which taken together can be seen as remarkably ambivalent During his early years he was powerfully influenced by the work of great twentieth century pioneers of modern architecture and urban planning such as Ludwig Mies van der Rohe Hans Poelzig and Ernst May Till the early 1930s he was close to he New Objectivity and Neue Bauen movements or in Soviet terms Constructivism 4 As the Stalin era unfolded and his career progressed in the Soviet Union his work was increasingly defined by Socialist classicism the architectural expression of Socialist realism That is the style he brought back to East Germany in 1948 This aligned with the political currents of the time and it became remarkably ubiquitous in the postwar reconstruction architecture of the 1950s 4 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Family provenance and early years 1 2 Soviet Union 1 3 Soviet occupation zone 1 4 German Democratic Republic 2 Awards and honours selection 3 Output selection 4 Notes 5 ReferencesBiography editFamily provenance and early years edit Otto Wilhelm Curt Liebknecht was born in Frankfurt am Main where Otto Liebknecht 1876 1949 his father who had shunned the family tradition of political activism worked with what became Degussa as an increasingly senior industrial chemist 5 6 Otto Liebknecht the father has been identified in one source as one of the pioneers of Persil Perborat Silikat washing powder His mother born Elsa Ernestine Friedland was a pianist who had trained at the Berlin Conservatory she came from a musical Jewish family 7 However it was Kurt Liebknecht s uncle Karl Liebknecht as one of the murdered founders of the Communist Party in postwar Germany who left a larger footprint in the mainstream historical record than either of his parents 8 Another of his father s brothers Theodor Liebknecht was also prominent in left wing politics during and directly after the First World War 9 Liebknecht completed his schooling at the Wohler Realgymnasium secondary school passing his Abitur exam early in 1924 which opened the way to a university level education 2 First however he worked for around six months as a building worker and carpenter 1 Later during 1924 he relocated to Berlin where between 1924 and 1929 he studied architecture at the Technical University Technische Universitat Berlin 2 His course provided for a period of practical study in 1927 during which he worked for the highly regarded architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe 2 In 1928 he won first prize in a student competition with his proposal for a public building in Malchin near Rostock 10 The next year he emerged with a Diplom Ingenieur degree in architecture Between 1929 and 1931 he was employed by the Hans Poelzig firm One of his projects during his time as part of Team Poelzig was for the interior fitting out of Berlin s prestigious new Haus des Rundfunks Broadcasting House 11 This was followed a period working as a Regierungsbaufuhrer government buildings manager working for the Free State of Prussia after which he passed the government exams necessary to move up a notch to the level of a Regierungsbaumeister In that position he headed up the construction of the University Women s Clinic Universitats Frauenklinik in Berlin Further work that he undertook between 1929 and the middle part of 1931 alongside involvement in city planning projects tended to focus on the health care sector especially on functional buildings principally hospitals 2 Soviet Union edit In August 1931 Liebknecht finding himself unemployed with a heavily pregnant wife relocated to the Soviet Union 12 The backwash from the Wall Street Crash in October 1929 had been reflected in a cut back in new building in Germany and it was possible to anticipate more and better opportunities for architects in Moscow than in Berlin 2 He returned for visits to Berlin in 1932 and to Hamburg in 1933 However the dramatic change of government in January 1933 meant that the creation of a hostile environment for Jews became a defining underpinning of government strategy in Germany Kurt Liebknecht was the son of a Jewish mother which meant that in the eyes of the authorities he was a half Jew It would also have counted against him that he came from one of Germany s most famous socialist dynasties Between 1933 and 1948 Kurt Liebknecht stayed out of Nazi Germany 3 His continuing professional success did not go unnoticed in Berlin and after war between Europe s principal dictatorships erupted in 1941 Kurt Liebknecht s name appeared on the Gestapo manhunt targets lists Sonderfahndungsliste of government opponents to be sought out and rounded up following a successful German invasion of the Soviet Union 1 In the Soviet Union Liebknecht was entrusted over the years with senior positions in respect of various government construction projects Initially during 1931 32 he worked for an international team around the city planner Ernst May May had been heavily influenced by what is known in England as the Garden city movement and in 1930 he had moved with virtually his entire New Frankfurt team from Frankfurt am Main to Moscow in order to support the Soviet Union s urban modernisation programme under the direction of powerful building policy committees of the ruling Communist Party 2 4 Liebknecht was assigned to the so called Second May Group under the leadership of another expatriate German architect Werner Hebebrand construction activity was focused on Moscow Within the Second May Group Liebknecht was placed in charge of the Hospitals Building Sub group 2 Alongside these assignments he teamed up with his Dutch colleague Marinus Gewin to enter a submission for an international competition held in 1931 involving plans much touted but never implemented for a Palace of the Soviets on the site of the demolished Cathedral of Christ the Saviour near the Moscow Kremlin 2 By 1932 with some of the initial impetus from Ernst May s group projects beginning to fade Liebknecht switched to the People s Commissariat for Health s Commission for Project Standards Kommission fur Projektierungsnormative des Volkskommissariats fur Gesundheitswesen Then starting in 1933 he worked for the People s Commissariat for Transport and Communications Volkskommissariat fur Verkehrswesen und Verbindungswesen where he was responsible for the planning of clinics along with residential and office developments in several important cities and towns including Magnitogorsk and Stalinsk as Novokuznetsk was known till 1961 2 1 13 He was provided with a comfortable three room apartment just a few hundred meters from his Moscow office 12 Identified as a deserving co worker in the building of socialism in the Soviet Union Kurt Liebknecht was given Soviet citizenship in 1937 1 He moved into a small single floor house of the type normally provided to rail workers 12 However the next year he was caught up in the Stalinist Clean up Bolshaya chistka identified sometimes in western sources as the Great Terror As part of the Operation to take repressive measures against German national who are suspected of espionage against the Soviet Union NKVD Order Number 00439 14 For two days as he later testified under questioning he was left naked in an empty cell without even a board on which to lie after which an unconscious man was placed in the cell with him followed by many more mangled individuals In three interrogation session during June 1938 he sought to place the blame on others Then under torture he accepted that he had become a spy He remained in detention for more than a year 12 By 1939 many of the Germans who had fled to Moscow as refugees for reasons of race and or political activism after 1933 had not survived the Stalinist purges Kurt Liebknecht did survive Sources speculate that his cousin Wilhelm Liebknecht the son of his Uncle Karl intervened on his behalf Wilhelm Liebknecht a lawyer like his father had lived in Moscow since 1928 intervened with the authorities on behalf of a number of family members during the later 1930s and beyond until he himself fell under suspicion and after 1941 was banished with his family to Uzbekistan 12 Kurt Liebknecht was one of relatively few Germans in the Soviet Union to be fully rehabilitated in the aftermath of the purges though he lived with the awareness that he was being constantly monitored and his luck might turn again During the rest of his time in the Soviet Union he took care never to speak German for fear of raising suspicion 12 As part of his rehabilitation at the end of 1939 Liebknecht took charge of the Department of Health and Social Matters at the All Unions Academiy for Architecture in Moscow After the German invasion which began in June 1941 he was mandated to work in collaboration with the Red army on plans for underground medical facilities 2 As the German army advanced towards Moscow it became more important than ever that he always presented himself as a loyal Soviet citizen His architectural designs came with ever more Russian national flourishes 12 As the Germans came closer the entire All Unions Academy including all its workers was evactuated to Shymkent Shymkent an industrial city with a rich cultural heritage in Kazakhstan 12 After the focus of the fighting turned with disastrous results for the invaders to Stalingrad in 1943 Liebknecht was able to return to the Architecture Academy in Moscow 12 With the future defeat of Nazi Germany clearly on the horizon in 1944 Kurt Liebknecht met with Wilhelm Pieck in Moscow in 1944 Pieck was the respected leader of the exiled German Communist Party and a senior representative of the Communist dominated National Committee for a Free Germany Liebknecht was keen do discuss how he might contribute to the reconstruction of postwar Germany 2 It can have done no damage to his future prospects that Liebknecht while they were both still in Moscow had written to and sought out the man who later became the president of the German Democratic Republic East Germany nevertheless for two or three years following the war which in Europe ended formally in May 1945 Liebknecht remained in Moscow receiving a doctorate in June 1945 with a dissertation on hospital construction in Soviet Central Asia 1 In 1946 Kurt Liebknecht made his first visit back to Germany since 1933 Unlike most Germans returning from the Soviet Union he arrived by air He left his Ukrainian born first wife and his son behind in Moscow By the time he returned to settle permanently in East Berlin he was accompanied by Lydia his second wife and their two small children 12 During 1946 47 he was a freelance worker at the Soviet Information Office and a specialist contributor on building matters in the German language section of Radio Moscow which involved several further working visits to East Berlin 1 He was much involved in negotiations for the establishment of an academy of building and architecture Bauakademie an academic institute that could define the theoretical principals for the massive reconstruction challenges ahead and convert those principals into reality During one of his visits in July 1946 he himself was appointed deputy head of the newly opened Academy of Arts and humanities by the Soviet Military Administration that had been in charge of the Soviet occupation zone since the previous summer He was also appointed secretary of the Health facilities department 2 Meanwhile in the Soviet Union in 1947 he completed plans for a major health clinic in Stalingrad 1 Soviet occupation zone edit In 1948 Kurt Liebknecht settled in Berlin at the heart of the Germany s Soviet occupation zone although the city itself was divided into four separate military occupation zones of which the Soviet zone covering the eastern part of the city was by far the largest In the zone s destroyed cities the defining challenge involved adopting Soviet Socialist construction principals for the massive rebuilding programme that was needed Among the leading politicians flown in from Moscow three years earlier there was no one with the necessary expertise From within Germany even among the architects untainted by suspicion of National Socialist crimes misdemeanours or sympathies none had the necessary knowledge So Kurt Liebknecht was installed in a succession of hugely influential positions by the Soviet Military Firstly within the Ministry for Reconstruction he was made head of the Institute for Urban Building and Construction Institut fur Stadtebau und Hochbau Presidency of the Bauakademie would followed in 1951 The objective was to give the cities a new Soviet face to convey to the war shattered populations the Kremlin vision for a new way of living Wide street with space for parades or where necessary more serious troop deployments In an echo of the fallen regime the people must be impressed by the scale of public buildings Old city centres with their winding alleys and little hidden courtyards shops banks cafes and general stores were to be torn down Boulevards which had once provided the stage sets for civic life and places for people to meet up should disappear and be replaced by empty yawning open spaces which could not easily be replaced Early concepts of city life must be obliterated Public space must become nationalised visible and controllable 12 Liebknecht was also co opted to work with the German Economic Commission Deutsche Wirtschaftskommission an innocuously named organisation which formed the basis for a future government in the event that the direct control by the Soviet Military should ever be relaxed Within the Commission Liebknecht served as head of the department responsible for administering building and constructions 2 German Democratic Republic edit On 7 October 1949 the Soviet occupation zone was relaunched as the Soviet sponsored German Democratic Republic East Germany and Liebknecht s career in state backed urban planning and architecture progressed further He joined the party only in December 1949 1 but his record in the Soviet Union evidently ensured that as far as the new state was concerned his political credentials were beyond reproach from the outset Nevertheless between 1950 and 1954 he undertook a fur year distance learning course with the Karx Marx Party political Academy 1 Till 1951 Liebknecht retained his post as director at the Institute for Urban Building and Construction Institut fur Stadtebau und Hochbau During this time as the leading East German expert on Soviet city construction in April May 1950 he spent seven week as part of a high level government delegation to the Soviet Union led by the Minister for Reconstruction Lothar Bolz The East Germans had the opportunity to inspect and study architectural precepts being applied in the great socialist brother state visiting Moscow Kyiv Stalingrad as it was still known at the time and Leningrad Shortly after the delegation returned home the results of the visit were published in East Germany as the 16 principles of urban building 16 Grundsatze des Stadtebaus 15 This set the pattern for numerous development and redevelopment schemes including most prominently the Stalin Alle formerly the Grosse Frankfurter Strasse and since 1961 the Karl Marx Allee which as a major boulevard development fit for a socialist future became an important part of the government s propaganda repertoire 12 16 In 1950 Liebknecht undertook a research contract to analyse clinical facilities in the region administered till 1952 and again after 1990 as the State of Brandenburg In 1951 he was given a professorship at the Hochschule fur Baukunst in Weimar 1 although there are strong indications that his own contributions to the East German built environment took little account of the Bauhaus ideas which had inspired the institution differently named before 1933 12 17 Meanwhile the government gave him a lead role in the planning of the Bauakademie college of building and architecture set in the heart of East Berlin which finally opened its doors in January 1951 18 Kurt Liebknecht became its first president in April 1951 18 As the director of the academy around this time he issued a couple of papers concerning the artistic character of city architecture Kunstcharakter des Stadtebaus and on national traditions nationale Traditionen between them these did much to define the direction of the academic study of architecture in East Germany during the 1950s His subsequent membership starting in February 1951 of the artistic sciences council at the Ministry of Culture meant he was part of the nationalk leadership team 1 He also held the post of acting head of the Architecture advisory council to the Council of Ministers 1 Another government appointment came in 1952 when he joined the presudium of the Society for foreign cultural links Gesellschaft fur kulturelle Verbindung mit dem Ausland 1 In terms of the political hierarchy his most significant appointment came in 1954 when he became one of at this stage just 90 members of the Party Central Committee he retained his membership till 1963 19 In some ways the death of Stalin marked the beginning of the end of Liebknecht s stellar career He remained in post as president of the Bauakademie till 1961 but never entirely came to terms with the emerging trends in architecture during the second half of the 1950s 12 His successor at the Bauakademie was Gerhard Kosel 1909 2003 12 who had also worked successfully as an architect in the Soviet Union returning to East Germany as the Krushchev era dawned only in September 1954 20 Liebknecht s career took a clear stumble in 1961 with his appointment as director at the Institute for the theory and history of architecture Institut fur Theorie und Geschichte der Architektur which was clearly a significantly less influential position than the one from which he had retired 19 He remained in that position for just after a year following which he took on the rectorship at the newly founded Technical Institute for Healthcare Building Construction Instituts fur Technologie der Gesundheitsbauten where he remained till his retirement in 1970 2 19 After 1970 he continued to participate in committees at the Bauakademie 2 and even after 1972 for several years he took a leading role at the professional Association of East German architects BdA which had emerged in 1952 from the enforced splitting of the old Association of German Architects 21 As a pensioner he continued to undertake freelance work 1 Kurt Liebknecht published his autobiography under the title Mein bewegtes Leben in 1986 12 22 Some commentators feel that in it he rather glossed over some of the more brutal aspects of his time in the Soviet Union 12 Awards and honours selection edit1970 Patriotic Order of Merit in Silver 1971 Schinkel Medal East German virtual equivalent of West German Schinkel prize 1975 Patriotic Order of Merit in Gold 1980 Order of Karl Marx 1985 Star of People s FriendshipOutput selection editGesundheitsbau Projektierung unter den Bedingungen Mittelasiens Moskau 1945 doctoral dissertation Fragen der deutschen Architektur und des Stadtebaus 1952 as co author Sowjetische Architektur 1953 as co author Handbuch fur Architektur 1954 as co author Die nationalen Aufgaben der deutschen Architektur Deutsche Bauakademie 1954 Architektur und Stadtebau in der DDR 1959 as co author Baupolitik und Bauwissenschaft in den ersten Jahren der DDR Ost Berlin 1980 Mein bewegtes Leben autobiography Verlag fur Bauwesen Ost Berlin 1986 ISBN 3 345 00039 3Notes editReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Simone Hain Peter Erler Liebknecht Kurt 26 3 1905 6 1 1994 Prasident der Bauakademie Wer war wer in der DDR Ch Links Verlag Berlin amp Bundesstiftung zur Aufarbeitung der SED Diktatur Berlin Retrieved 12 May 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Antonela Saravanja compiler 12 December 2013 Liebknecht Kurt Otto Wilhelm Curt Institut Kunst und Baugeschichte Fachgebiet Kunstgeschichte Karlsruher Institut fur Technologie Retrieved 12 May 2019 a b Kurzbiografie Geschichte der Institution Kurt Liebknecht Archiv Archiv der Akademie der Kunste Berlin Retrieved 12 May 2019 a b c Kalte Asche und Spucke Der Spiegel online 22 August 1951 Retrieved 13 May 2019 Otto Liebknecht Chemiker Der streitbare Forscher Chefchemiker des Forschungslabors der Deutschen Gold und Silberscheide Anstalt der spateren Degussa AG Evonik Industries AG Essen Retrieved 12 May 2019 Birgit Bertsch Frank Eine etwas ungewohnliche Karriere Otto Liebknecht in Mechtild Wolf Hrsg Immer eine Idee besser Forscher und Erfinder der Degussa Frankfurt am Main Degussa AG 1998 pp 54 75 Liebknecht Otto Einer der Wegbereiter des Waschmittels Persil Frankfurter Burgerstiftung Frankfurter Personenlexikon Retrieved 12 May 2019 Liebknecht Karl geb am 13 08 1871 in Leipzig Datenbank der deutschen Parlamentsabgeordneten Basis Parlamentsalmanache Reichstagshandbucher 1867 1938 Bayerische Staatsbibliothek Munchen Retrieved 12 May 2019 Ilse Fischer 1985 Liebknecht Theodor sozialistischer Politiker 19 4 1870 Leipzig 6 1 1948 Brome Altendorf Niedersachsen Neue Deutsche Biographie Historische Kommission bei der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften HiKo Munchen p 504 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Kurt Liebknecht Europaisches Kultur und Informationszentrum in Thuringen Via Regia Erfurt Retrieved 12 May 2019 Boberg Daniel 18 May 2018 Geschichte des Haus des Rundfunks Retrieved 12 May 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Dr Andreas Petersen 13 March 2019 Der Ueberlebende The survivor FISCHER E Books pp 57 58 ISBN 978 3 10 491045 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Ivan Nevzgodin 2006 Revolutionizing Hospital Architecture Experiments in the Soviet Union University Medical Center Groningen pp 42 57 ISBN 90 5662 464 4 Retrieved 13 May 2019 Nikita Ochotin Arsenij Roginskij Zur Geschichte der Deutschen Operation des NKVD 1937 1938 In Hermann Weber Ulrich Mahlert Hrsg Verbrechen im Namen der Idee pp 143 189 amp 316 319 First published in the Jahrbuch fur Historische Kommunismusforschung 2000 2001 pp 89 125 Die 16 Grundsatze des Stadtebaus Dresdner Nachkriegsarchitektur Ostmodern Dresden Retrieved 14 May 2019 Corina Kolbe 31 August 2018 Moskaus kleine Schwestern Stalins Stadte in der DDR Monumentale Strassen und Platze ganz wie in Stalins Sowjetunion per Radikalumbau der Stadtzentren wollte die SED Macht demonstrieren Viele Plane der fruhen DDR Jahre blieben Makulatur Der Spiegel online Retrieved 14 May 2019 Manfred Sack 10 December 1976 Feier ohne Fest Die DDR erinnert sich an ein Stuck deutscher Vergangenheit Die Zeit online Retrieved 14 May 2019 a b Ministerium fur Bauwesen Teil 1 Ministerium fur Aufbau 1949 1958 Einleitung Das Bundesarchiv Koblenz Retrieved 14 May 2019 a b c Siegfried Heimann 2014 Zur Biografie von Kurt Liebknecht Ch Links Verlag pp 35 40 ISBN 978 3 86153 804 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Simone Hain Peter Erler Kosel Gerhard 18 2 1909 21 9 2003 Prasident der Bauakademie Wer war wer in der DDR Ch Links Verlag Berlin amp Bundesstiftung zur Aufarbeitung der SED Diktatur Berlin Retrieved 14 May 2019 Stefanie Leibetseder 13 February 2017 Zwischen Widerstand und Anpassung Tobias Zervosen erzahlt vom Niedergang des Architektenberufes zu DDR Zeiten und seiner kurzen Blute vor dem Mauerfall book review Institut fur Neuere deutsche Literatur literaturkritik de Marburg Retrieved 15 May 2019 Kurt Liebknecht Mein bewegtes Leben VEB Verlag fur Bauwesen Berlin pp 190 191 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kurt Liebknecht amp oldid 1141849561, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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