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Ödön Lechner

Ödön Lechner (born Eugen Lechner, 27 August 1845 – 10 June 1914) was a Hungarian architect, one of the prime representatives of the Hungarian Szecesszió style, which was related to Art Nouveau in the rest of Europe, including the Vienna Secession. He is famous for decorating his buildings with Zsolnay tile patterns inspired by old Magyar and Turkic folk art, which are combined with modern materials such as iron.

Ödön Lechner
Born
Eugen Lechner

(1845-08-27)27 August 1845
Pest, Austrian Empire
Died10 June 1914(1914-06-10) (aged 68)
Budapest, Austria-Hungary
Other names"Hungarian Gaudí"
Alma materSchinkel Academy
OccupationArchitect
SpouseIrma Primayer
ChildrenJános Ödön
Irma
Parent(s)Johann Lechner
Theresia Schummayer
BuildingsHeadquarters, National Bank of Hungary
Museum of Applied Arts

Lechner's work was submitted in 2008 for inclusion on the World Heritage List.[1]

Early career and travel

Lechner was born in Pest into a bourgeois family. His father, János Lechner (1812–1884), of Bavarian descent, was a certified lawyer, capital tax collector, and owner of a brick factory, who married Terézia Schummayer (1817–1895).[2][3] His paternal grandparents were János Lechner Nepomuk (1774–1845), the head of a building materials factory and the Royal Beauty Commissioner of Pest and Erzsébet Hupf (1786–1853).[4] He began his secondary school studies at the Real School of Downtown Pest (Pest-belvárosi Reáltanodán), then he attended the József Ipartanoda (now the Budapest University of Technology and Economics) to study architecture in 1865–66, where one of his teachers was Antal Szkalnitzky, responsible for many of Buda and Pest's major public buildings in the decades before the two cities merged in 1873.

In 1866 Lechner went to Berlin, where he spent three years at the Academy of Architecture with Alajos Hauszmann and Gyula Pártos, studying under Karl Bötticher, who became a great influence with his lectures on building materials, especially the role of iron-framed structures. After finishing his studies in Berlin, Lechner departed on a one-year tour and study in Italy in 1868 with his wife Irma Primayer, whom he had recently married. In 1869 he went into a partnership with Gyula Pártos and the architecture firm received a steady flow of commissions during the boom years of the 1870s, during the construction of buildings lining the ring roads on the Pest side of the Danube. The commissions the partners received were primarily apartment houses in which Lechner worked in the prevailing historicist style, drawing on neo-classical influences from Berlin and the Italian Renaissance.

Lechner interrupted his partnership with Pártos between 1874 and 1878 when he went to work in the studio of Clément Parent in France, where he was involved in the restoration of many French monuments. He took part in the design and renovation of seven castles. This was also influenced by a family tragedy, as after a six-year marriage, Lechner lost his wife Irma in 1875 and was left alone with two small children. In 1879 he also visited England.

Returning home, he reunited with Pártos and together they built a series of large-scale works, such as Szeged City Hall (1882), the apartment building of the former MÁV Pension Institute in Budapest at Andrássy út 25 (1883), and the Milkó House in Szeged). These still represent the historicizing style, but several features of his later art, such the use of folk ornamentation, are already evident in these designs. In 1889–90 he made his second visit to England, this time with Vilmos Zsolnay, a stoneware and terracotta manufacturer. There he studied oriental ceramics, primarily Indian decorative elements, at the South Kensington Museum (now the Victoria and Albert Museum). There was also a trace of English influence among his works, most notably Zsambok Castle (unfortunately destroyed in the Second World War).

Development of szecesszió and a Hungarian national style

 
Interior light court of the Museum of Applied Arts, Budapest.
 
German Palace, Szeged.

After 1890, Lechner increasingly turned to Hungarian folklore, as derived from Persian and Indian decorative arts, as his inspiration in his aim to form a Hungarian national style. His relationship with Zsolnay flourished and throughout the rest of his career he began to make free use of the company's stoneware tiles, beginning with the Thonet House in Budapest, Váci utca (1889) with its steel structure and the façade covered with Zsolnay terracotta. He followed this up with the Museum of Applied Arts (1893–96), a commission for which he and Pártos won the design competition in 1891. The building's glazed tiles, the pyrogranite decorative elements, and the pierced floral motifs testify to Lechner's newfound Indian, Persian, Moorish, and Hungarian folk influences, as well as the cladding theories of German architectural theorist Gottfried Semper.[5] The building represented a significant break from the historicism - mostly Baroque- and Gothic-revival architecture - popular in Budapest at the time. Though it encountered a mixed reception amongst critics, it was triumphantly inaugurated in time for the 1896 celebrations of the millennium anniversary of the Kingdom of Hungary. The building is today considered the first complete statement of Hungarian Szecesszió (Art Nouveau) architecture, and it formed a counterweight in the Hungarian half of the Austro-Hungarian dual monarchy to the work of the Secession developed later in Vienna around Otto Wagner, Joseph Maria Olbrich, Gustav Klimt, and others.

After 1896, Lechner and Pártos dissolved their partnership, with each continuing on in independent practice. In 1897 Lechner was commissioned to build the new home, on Stefánia út east of the city center, of the Geological Museum of Budapest, another of his distinctive Szecesszió designs. These developments in his vocabulary arguably reached their peak with the new Royal Postal Savings Bank (today the Hungarian State Treasury), on Hold utca in Budapest, built from 1899 to 1904. On 1 July 1900 he was named a "Királyi tanácsos" (Royal Counselor) to the King of Hungary, Emperor Franz Josef I, and for his work on the building the Hungarian Képzőművészek egyesülete (Association of Fine Artists) awarded him their "Nagy Aranyéremmel," or Grand Gold Medal.[6]

Among Lechner's ecclesiastical commissions, perhaps the most notable is the parish church of St. Ladislaus in Kőbánya, Budapest, although its design is based on the earlier plans of Elek Barcza. The most significant commission of the last decade of his life was the Catholic Church of St. Elizabeth in Bratislava (then still called Poszony) (1907–13), an exuberant Szecesszió design built as the private chapel of an adjacent Gymnasium school, which is now an independent parish.

Late career and influence

 
Lechner's own residence in Budapest.

Lechner received a gold medal at the Rome International Architecture Exhibition in 1911, along with his Austrian rival Otto Wagner. In the early 1900s, he received some small assignments, such as the reconstruction of the Dominican House in Szeged; the entrance to the Ernst Museum, Budapest; the Balázs Sipeki Villa; and the Péter Vajda Street School; but he enjoyed little success in his search for larger commissions. In 1906 he published a summary of his views in the journal Művészet. One of Lechner's final commissions was for the Gyula Vermes house in the fifth district of Budapest in 1910–11.

Nonetheless, his creation of the Szecesszió spawned a number of followers and imitators throughout Hungary, including Béla Lajta, Géza Maróti, Dezső Jakab and Marcell Komor [hu],[7] Zoltán Bálint, Lajos Jámbor, Artúr Sebestyén [hu], Györgyi Dénes [hu]Béla Jánszky [hu], Dezső Zrumetzky [hu], István Medgyaszay, Aladár Árkay, and Albert Kálmán Kőrössy.[8][9]

Buildings and projects

 
Thonet House, Budapest.
 
Gyula Vermes House, Irányi ut 15, Budapest.
 
Karlovci Gymnasium, Sremski Karlovci, Serbia.
  • 1870: Batthyány Tomb
  • 1871: House of József Lenhossék, Budapest VIII., Múzeum krt. 33 (destroyed)
  • 1871: Military men's house of 1848, Budapest IX., Soroksári út 62 (destroyed)
  • 1871–72: János Primayer House, Budapest V., Sas u. 9 (Former Kéksas Street) (Lechner himself lived here, his father-in-law's residence, for an extended period)
  • 1871–74: Apartment building, Budapest V., Szent István tér 3
  • 1871–75: Pál Mándl house, Budapest VI., Bajcsy-Zsilinszky út 43
  • 1872–74: Kecskemét apartment building, Budapest V., Veres Pálné utca 9
  • 1873: Arad City Hall (plan)
  • 1874: Tomb of Irma Primayer, Budapest VIII., Fiumei Úti Tomb Garden
  • 1874–75: Kecskemét Savings Bank, Kecskemét, Szabadság tér
  • 1875: Skating Rink, Budapest, Városliget (demolished in 1893)
  • 1880: School, Sombor
  • 1882: Kecskemét City Baths (unbuilt)
  • 1882–83: City Hall, Szeged, Széchenyi tér 10 (with Gyula Pártos )
  • 1882–83: Milkó Palace (monument), Szeged, Roosevelt Square 5
  • 1882–84: Hungarian Railway Pensioners Building (Palais Drechsler), Budapest, (with Pártos)
  • 1885–86: Nagybecskerek City Hall, (today's Zrenjanin, Serbia), (with Pártos)
  • 1885–86: Nagybecskerek, County Hall
  • 1887: Rudolf cavalry barracks, Kecskemét (listed monument)[10]
  • 1888–89: Thonet House, Budapest V., Váci u. 11 (listed monument)[11]
  • 1888: Ottó Biedermann Castle, Mozsgó (destroyed in a fire in 1917 and then partially restored)
  • 1889–91: Karlovci Gymnasium, Karlóca (now Sremski Karlovci, Serbia) (with Pártos)
  • 1889–93: Szegzárd Hotel, Szekszárd
  • 1890–96. Kecskemét City Hall, Kossuth Lajos tér 1 (with Pártos)
  • 1891–96: Budapest Museum of Applied Arts, Budapest IX., Üllői út 33-37 (listed monument)
  • 1891–97: Saint Ladislaus Church (Szent László-plébániatemplom), Kőbánya, Budapest X., Templom tér (listed monument)[12]
  • 1892–93: Palace of Simon Leovich, Subotica, Serbia
  • 1894: Ferenc József Bridge traffic plan, Budapest
  • 1895: Lechner House, Budapest IX., Berzenczey u. 11
  • 1895: Greek Church Street, Kecskemét, Bazaar Row
  • 1896–99: Geological Institute, Budapest
  • 1897: Ilka Lechner Vacation House, Pécel, Korányi u. 8.
  • 1898–1900: Lechner House, Bartók Béla út 40 (listed monument)
  • 1899: Stock Exchange, Budapest (unbuilt)[13]
  • 1899–1901: The Postal Savings Bank building (Postatakarékpénztár), Budapest
  • 1900: Villa of Károly Lechner, Cluj-Napoca
  • 1902: Postal Palace plan, Bratislava (with Béla Lajta)[14]
  • 1902–04: Klein Castle, Szirma (now Miskolc) (with Béla Lajta; destroyed in World War II)
  • 1903: Gerngross Department Store, Vienna (design competition)
  • 1903: Tomb of Schmidl family, Kozma Street Cemetery, Budapest, together with Béla Lajta
  • 1905: Ministry of Culture, Budapest V., Széchenyi rkp. (design competition)
  • 1905: Villa of Balázs Béla Sipeki, today MVGYOSZ, the headquarters of the Hungarian Association of the Blind and Visually Impaired, Budapest XIV., Hermina út 47 (listed monument)[15]
  • 1906–08: Royal Catholic Gymnasium in Pozsony (Pressburg), Kingdom of Hungary (Kráľovské katolícke gymnázium in today's Bratislava, Slovakia)
  • 1907–13: The Church of St. Elizabeth (Blue Church) in Pozsony (Pressburg) (today's Bratislava)
  • 1909: State Teacher Career Training Center, Sárospatak[16]
  • 1909: Plans of the monument to Queen Elizabeth, Budapest, Castle Hill
  • 1909–10: Kecskemét, Water Tower and Rákóczi monument, plan[17]
  • 1909–12: Saint Ladislaus Church in South Norwalk, Connecticut, USA
  • 1910: Mixed-use building at Irányi ut 15, Budapest
  • 1910-11: Gyula Vermes House, Budapest[18]
  • 1913–24: Simor Street School (today Péter Vajda Primary and Sports School of Singing and Music), Budapest VIII., Vajda Péter u. 25-31
  • 1914: Szent László Gimnázium, Budapest X. (Kőbánya), Kőrösi Csoma Sándor út 28-34 (listed monument)[19]
  • 1914: Francis Joseph Memorial Church, Budapest VIII., Rezső tér (design competition, 1st prize)[20]
  • 1914–15: Szent László Gimnázium, Budapest

Gallery

Monuments and memorials

 
Ödön Lechner Monument outside the Museum of Applied Arts, Budapest.
  • The Ödön Lechner Society was founded in 1928; its founding members included Béla Bartók, Zoltán Kodály, Jenő Lechner, Loránd Lechner, István Medgyaszay, and Kornél Neuschloss.
  • There is a statue in front of the Museum of Applied Arts, next to the Margaret Island Artist's Promenade, and in Szent László Square in Kőbánya.
  • Lechner's bust can be seen in the pantheon of Dóm Square in Szeged.
  • A row of trees in the capital, a square in Szeged, and streets in several cities (such as Kecskemét), are named for Lechner.
  • Lechner's burial place is the 19th tomb of the 28th row of the Fiumei Úti Tomb Garden.

Sources

  1. ^ Ödön Lechner's independent pre-modern architecture
  2. ^ "familysearch.org Lechner János gyászjelentése".
  3. ^ "familysearch.org Lechner Jánosné Schummayer Terézia gyászjelentése".
  4. ^ "familysearch.org idősebb Lechner Jánosné Hup Erzsébet gyászjelentése".
  5. ^ Rebecca Houze, "Hungarian Nationalism, Gottfried Semper, and the Budapest Museum of Applied Art," Studies in the Decorative Arts 16, no. 2 (Spring-Summer 2009):7–38.
  6. ^ K 19 – Király Személye Körüli Minisztérium Levéltára – Királyi könyvek – 70. kötet – 713. oldal
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 July 2009. Retrieved 27 September 2008.
  8. ^ Kőrössy A magyar szecessziós stílusban épült Tündérpalota tervezője
  9. ^ Idézet Gerle-Kovács-Makovecz: A századforduló magyar építészete könyvből
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 December 2008. Retrieved 27 September 2008.
  11. ^ THONET-HÁZ. Bp. V., Váci u. 11/a
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 10 May 2012. Retrieved 27 September 2008.
  13. ^ Tőzsdepalota tervpályázat II. díj[]
  14. ^ Pozsony. Postapalota tervpályázat[]
  15. ^ Sipeki Balázs Béla villája a Hermina úton
  16. ^ Sárospatak Állami Tanítóképző tervpályázat
  17. ^ Víztorony és Rákóczi-emlékmű tervpályázat
  18. ^ "Irányi utca 15". See Budapest!. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 May 2004. Retrieved 30 September 2008.
  20. ^ Ferenc József emléktemplom a Rezső téren. Tervpályázat I. díj[]

External links

  • The 'Hungarian Gaudi': Architect Ödön Lechner in 4 buildings - CNN

  Media related to Ödön Lechner at Wikimedia Commons

ödön, lechner, native, form, this, personal, name, lechner, ödön, this, article, uses, western, name, order, when, mentioning, individuals, born, eugen, lechner, august, 1845, june, 1914, hungarian, architect, prime, representatives, hungarian, szecesszió, sty. The native form of this personal name is Lechner Odon This article uses Western name order when mentioning individuals Odon Lechner born Eugen Lechner 27 August 1845 10 June 1914 was a Hungarian architect one of the prime representatives of the Hungarian Szecesszio style which was related to Art Nouveau in the rest of Europe including the Vienna Secession He is famous for decorating his buildings with Zsolnay tile patterns inspired by old Magyar and Turkic folk art which are combined with modern materials such as iron Odon LechnerBornEugen Lechner 1845 08 27 27 August 1845Pest Austrian EmpireDied10 June 1914 1914 06 10 aged 68 Budapest Austria HungaryOther names Hungarian Gaudi Alma materSchinkel AcademyOccupationArchitectSpouseIrma PrimayerChildrenJanos Odon IrmaParent s Johann Lechner Theresia SchummayerBuildingsHeadquarters National Bank of HungaryMuseum of Applied ArtsLechner s work was submitted in 2008 for inclusion on the World Heritage List 1 Contents 1 Early career and travel 2 Development of szecesszio and a Hungarian national style 3 Late career and influence 4 Buildings and projects 5 Gallery 6 Monuments and memorials 7 Sources 8 External linksEarly career and travel EditLechner was born in Pest into a bourgeois family His father Janos Lechner 1812 1884 of Bavarian descent was a certified lawyer capital tax collector and owner of a brick factory who married Terezia Schummayer 1817 1895 2 3 His paternal grandparents were Janos Lechner Nepomuk 1774 1845 the head of a building materials factory and the Royal Beauty Commissioner of Pest and Erzsebet Hupf 1786 1853 4 He began his secondary school studies at the Real School of Downtown Pest Pest belvarosi Realtanodan then he attended the Jozsef Ipartanoda now the Budapest University of Technology and Economics to study architecture in 1865 66 where one of his teachers was Antal Szkalnitzky responsible for many of Buda and Pest s major public buildings in the decades before the two cities merged in 1873 In 1866 Lechner went to Berlin where he spent three years at the Academy of Architecture with Alajos Hauszmann and Gyula Partos studying under Karl Botticher who became a great influence with his lectures on building materials especially the role of iron framed structures After finishing his studies in Berlin Lechner departed on a one year tour and study in Italy in 1868 with his wife Irma Primayer whom he had recently married In 1869 he went into a partnership with Gyula Partos and the architecture firm received a steady flow of commissions during the boom years of the 1870s during the construction of buildings lining the ring roads on the Pest side of the Danube The commissions the partners received were primarily apartment houses in which Lechner worked in the prevailing historicist style drawing on neo classical influences from Berlin and the Italian Renaissance Lechner interrupted his partnership with Partos between 1874 and 1878 when he went to work in the studio of Clement Parent in France where he was involved in the restoration of many French monuments He took part in the design and renovation of seven castles This was also influenced by a family tragedy as after a six year marriage Lechner lost his wife Irma in 1875 and was left alone with two small children In 1879 he also visited England Returning home he reunited with Partos and together they built a series of large scale works such as Szeged City Hall 1882 the apartment building of the former MAV Pension Institute in Budapest at Andrassy ut 25 1883 and the Milko House in Szeged These still represent the historicizing style but several features of his later art such the use of folk ornamentation are already evident in these designs In 1889 90 he made his second visit to England this time with Vilmos Zsolnay a stoneware and terracotta manufacturer There he studied oriental ceramics primarily Indian decorative elements at the South Kensington Museum now the Victoria and Albert Museum There was also a trace of English influence among his works most notably Zsambok Castle unfortunately destroyed in the Second World War Development of szecesszio and a Hungarian national style Edit Interior light court of the Museum of Applied Arts Budapest German Palace Szeged After 1890 Lechner increasingly turned to Hungarian folklore as derived from Persian and Indian decorative arts as his inspiration in his aim to form a Hungarian national style His relationship with Zsolnay flourished and throughout the rest of his career he began to make free use of the company s stoneware tiles beginning with the Thonet House in Budapest Vaci utca 1889 with its steel structure and the facade covered with Zsolnay terracotta He followed this up with the Museum of Applied Arts 1893 96 a commission for which he and Partos won the design competition in 1891 The building s glazed tiles the pyrogranite decorative elements and the pierced floral motifs testify to Lechner s newfound Indian Persian Moorish and Hungarian folk influences as well as the cladding theories of German architectural theorist Gottfried Semper 5 The building represented a significant break from the historicism mostly Baroque and Gothic revival architecture popular in Budapest at the time Though it encountered a mixed reception amongst critics it was triumphantly inaugurated in time for the 1896 celebrations of the millennium anniversary of the Kingdom of Hungary The building is today considered the first complete statement of Hungarian Szecesszio Art Nouveau architecture and it formed a counterweight in the Hungarian half of the Austro Hungarian dual monarchy to the work of the Secession developed later in Vienna around Otto Wagner Joseph Maria Olbrich Gustav Klimt and others After 1896 Lechner and Partos dissolved their partnership with each continuing on in independent practice In 1897 Lechner was commissioned to build the new home on Stefania ut east of the city center of the Geological Museum of Budapest another of his distinctive Szecesszio designs These developments in his vocabulary arguably reached their peak with the new Royal Postal Savings Bank today the Hungarian State Treasury on Hold utca in Budapest built from 1899 to 1904 On 1 July 1900 he was named a Kiralyi tanacsos Royal Counselor to the King of Hungary Emperor Franz Josef I and for his work on the building the Hungarian Kepzomuveszek egyesulete Association of Fine Artists awarded him their Nagy Aranyeremmel or Grand Gold Medal 6 Among Lechner s ecclesiastical commissions perhaps the most notable is the parish church of St Ladislaus in Kobanya Budapest although its design is based on the earlier plans of Elek Barcza The most significant commission of the last decade of his life was the Catholic Church of St Elizabeth in Bratislava then still called Poszony 1907 13 an exuberant Szecesszio design built as the private chapel of an adjacent Gymnasium school which is now an independent parish Late career and influence Edit Lechner s own residence in Budapest Lechner received a gold medal at the Rome International Architecture Exhibition in 1911 along with his Austrian rival Otto Wagner In the early 1900s he received some small assignments such as the reconstruction of the Dominican House in Szeged the entrance to the Ernst Museum Budapest the Balazs Sipeki Villa and the Peter Vajda Street School but he enjoyed little success in his search for larger commissions In 1906 he published a summary of his views in the journal Muveszet One of Lechner s final commissions was for the Gyula Vermes house in the fifth district of Budapest in 1910 11 Nonetheless his creation of the Szecesszio spawned a number of followers and imitators throughout Hungary including Bela Lajta Geza Maroti Dezso Jakab and Marcell Komor hu 7 Zoltan Balint Lajos Jambor Artur Sebestyen hu Gyorgyi Denes hu Bela Janszky hu Dezso Zrumetzky hu Istvan Medgyaszay Aladar Arkay and Albert Kalman Korossy 8 9 Buildings and projects Edit Thonet House Budapest Gyula Vermes House Iranyi ut 15 Budapest Karlovci Gymnasium Sremski Karlovci Serbia 1870 Batthyany Tomb 1871 House of Jozsef Lenhossek Budapest VIII Muzeum krt 33 destroyed 1871 Military men s house of 1848 Budapest IX Soroksari ut 62 destroyed 1871 72 Janos Primayer House Budapest V Sas u 9 Former Keksas Street Lechner himself lived here his father in law s residence for an extended period 1871 74 Apartment building Budapest V Szent Istvan ter 3 1871 75 Pal Mandl house Budapest VI Bajcsy Zsilinszky ut 43 1872 74 Kecskemet apartment building Budapest V Veres Palne utca 9 1873 Arad City Hall plan 1874 Tomb of Irma Primayer Budapest VIII Fiumei Uti Tomb Garden 1874 75 Kecskemet Savings Bank Kecskemet Szabadsag ter 1875 Skating Rink Budapest Varosliget demolished in 1893 1880 School Sombor 1882 Kecskemet City Baths unbuilt 1882 83 City Hall Szeged Szechenyi ter 10 with Gyula Partos 1882 83 Milko Palace monument Szeged Roosevelt Square 5 1882 84 Hungarian Railway Pensioners Building Palais Drechsler Budapest with Partos 1885 86 Nagybecskerek City Hall today s Zrenjanin Serbia with Partos 1885 86 Nagybecskerek County Hall 1887 Rudolf cavalry barracks Kecskemet listed monument 10 1888 89 Thonet House Budapest V Vaci u 11 listed monument 11 1888 Otto Biedermann Castle Mozsgo destroyed in a fire in 1917 and then partially restored 1889 91 Karlovci Gymnasium Karloca now Sremski Karlovci Serbia with Partos 1889 93 Szegzard Hotel Szekszard 1890 96 Kecskemet City Hall Kossuth Lajos ter 1 with Partos 1891 96 Budapest Museum of Applied Arts Budapest IX Ulloi ut 33 37 listed monument 1891 97 Saint Ladislaus Church Szent Laszlo plebaniatemplom Kobanya Budapest X Templom ter listed monument 12 1892 93 Palace of Simon Leovich Subotica Serbia 1894 Ferenc Jozsef Bridge traffic plan Budapest 1895 Lechner House Budapest IX Berzenczey u 11 1895 Greek Church Street Kecskemet Bazaar Row 1896 99 Geological Institute Budapest 1897 Ilka Lechner Vacation House Pecel Koranyi u 8 1898 1900 Lechner House Bartok Bela ut 40 listed monument 1899 Stock Exchange Budapest unbuilt 13 1899 1901 The Postal Savings Bank building Postatakarekpenztar Budapest 1900 Villa of Karoly Lechner Cluj Napoca 1902 Postal Palace plan Bratislava with Bela Lajta 14 1902 04 Klein Castle Szirma now Miskolc with Bela Lajta destroyed in World War II 1903 Gerngross Department Store Vienna design competition 1903 Tomb of Schmidl family Kozma Street Cemetery Budapest together with Bela Lajta 1905 Ministry of Culture Budapest V Szechenyi rkp design competition 1905 Villa of Balazs Bela Sipeki today MVGYOSZ the headquarters of the Hungarian Association of the Blind and Visually Impaired Budapest XIV Hermina ut 47 listed monument 15 1906 08 Royal Catholic Gymnasium in Pozsony Pressburg Kingdom of Hungary Kraľovske katolicke gymnazium in today s Bratislava Slovakia 1907 13 The Church of St Elizabeth Blue Church in Pozsony Pressburg today s Bratislava 1909 State Teacher Career Training Center Sarospatak 16 1909 Plans of the monument to Queen Elizabeth Budapest Castle Hill 1909 10 Kecskemet Water Tower and Rakoczi monument plan 17 1909 12 Saint Ladislaus Church in South Norwalk Connecticut USA 1910 Mixed use building at Iranyi ut 15 Budapest 1910 11 Gyula Vermes House Budapest 18 1913 24 Simor Street School today Peter Vajda Primary and Sports School of Singing and Music Budapest VIII Vajda Peter u 25 31 1914 Szent Laszlo Gimnazium Budapest X Kobanya Korosi Csoma Sandor ut 28 34 listed monument 19 1914 Francis Joseph Memorial Church Budapest VIII Rezso ter design competition 1st prize 20 1914 15 Szent Laszlo Gimnazium BudapestGallery Edit City Hall Szeged 1882 Drechsler Palais Budapest 1882 84 Zrenjanin City Hall today s Serbia 1885 86 Saint Ladislaus Church Kobanya 1891 97 City Hall Kecskemet 1893 Museum of Applied Arts in Budapest 1896 Hungarian Postal Savings Bank 1899 1901 The Blue Church of Pozsony Pressburg today s Bratislava Slovakia 1907 13 Gymnazium Grosslingova in Pozsony Pressburg today s Bratislava 1906 08 Geological Museum Budapest 1896 99 Szent Laszlo Gimnazium Budapest 1914 15 Statue of Lechner by Ildiko Zsemlye in KobanyaMonuments and memorials Edit Odon Lechner Monument outside the Museum of Applied Arts Budapest The Odon Lechner Society was founded in 1928 its founding members included Bela Bartok Zoltan Kodaly Jeno Lechner Lorand Lechner Istvan Medgyaszay and Kornel Neuschloss There is a statue in front of the Museum of Applied Arts next to the Margaret Island Artist s Promenade and in Szent Laszlo Square in Kobanya Lechner s bust can be seen in the pantheon of Dom Square in Szeged A row of trees in the capital a square in Szeged and streets in several cities such as Kecskemet are named for Lechner Lechner s burial place is the 19th tomb of the 28th row of the Fiumei Uti Tomb Garden Sources Edit Odon Lechner s independent pre modern architecture familysearch org Lechner Janos gyaszjelentese familysearch org Lechner Janosne Schummayer Terezia gyaszjelentese familysearch org idosebb Lechner Janosne Hup Erzsebet gyaszjelentese Rebecca Houze Hungarian Nationalism Gottfried Semper and the Budapest Museum of Applied Art Studies in the Decorative Arts 16 no 2 Spring Summer 2009 7 38 K 19 Kiraly Szemelye Koruli Miniszterium Leveltara Kiralyi konyvek 70 kotet 713 oldal KOMOR MARCELL Archived from the original on 27 July 2009 Retrieved 27 September 2008 Korossy A magyar szecesszios stilusban epult Tunderpalota tervezoje Idezet Gerle Kovacs Makovecz A szazadfordulo magyar epiteszete konyvbol Rudolf lovassagi laktanya terve Kecskemet Archived from the original on 8 December 2008 Retrieved 27 September 2008 THONET HAZ Bp V Vaci u 11 a A Szent Laszlo plebaniatemplom tortenete Archived from the original on 10 May 2012 Retrieved 27 September 2008 Tozsdepalota tervpalyazat II dij dead link Pozsony Postapalota tervpalyazat dead link Sipeki Balazs Bela villaja a Hermina uton Sarospatak Allami Tanitokepzo tervpalyazat Viztorony es Rakoczi emlekmu tervpalyazat Iranyi utca 15 See Budapest Retrieved 29 May 2021 Kobanyai Szent Laszlo Gimnazium Archived from the original on 5 May 2004 Retrieved 30 September 2008 Ferenc Jozsef emlektemplom a Rezso teren Tervpalyazat I dij dead link External links EditThe Hungarian Gaudi Architect Odon Lechner in 4 buildings CNN Media related to Odon Lechner at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Odon Lechner amp oldid 1159554181, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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