Erwin Schleich Explained

Birth Date:20 April 1925
Birth Place:Munich, German Reich
Death Place:Munich, Germany
Alma Mater:Technical University of Munich

Erwin Schleich (20 April 1925 – 13 August 1992) was a German architect, architectural conservator, and architectural historian known for his post-war reconstruction of buildings and monuments in Munich.

Biography

Erwin Schleich was born in Munich. He graduated from the Wilhelmsgymnasium in 1943, and from 1947 to 1951, he studied architecture at the Technical University of Munich.[1] In 1957, he received his doctorate on the subject The Peterskirche in Munich, its building history and its relationship to the city in the Middle Ages, presented on the basis of the results of the excavations.[2]

Schleich later worked as a freelance architect and was responsible for the restoration and reconstruction of numerous monuments in Munich. In 1973, he was appointed to the, or State Monument Council. The Bavarian State Historic Preservation Law of 1973, which boosted cultural heritage preservation in the state, emerged from a suggestion by Schleich.[3]

In contrast with the growing trend towards modernism in post-war Germany, historical preservationists like Schleich kept the spirit of traditionalism alive when rebuilding Munich after the war. For example, in the case of Klosterkirche St. Anna im Lehel in 1968, Schleich reconstructed Johann Michael Fischer's original 18th century Rococo façade, instead of August von Voit's 19th century neo-Romanesque façade, which had been destroyed in the war. In the case of Heilig-Geist-Kirche in 1970, Schleich replaced the simple white interiors of the church's 1950s renovation with recreations of its original frescoes and Rococo ornamentation.

From 1974 to 1991, Schleich was a member of the board of directors of the Bavarian Association for Home Care. He died in Munich on 13 August 1992.[4]

Selected projects

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Erwin-Schleich-Straße . Landeshauptstadt München: Rathaus . de.
  2. PhD . Schleich . Erwin . 1957 . Die Peterskirche in München, ihre Baugeschichte und ihre Beziehungen zur Stadt im Mittelalter, dargestellt auf Grund der Ergebnisse der Ausgrabungen . Technische Universität München.
  3. Book: Rosenfeld . Gavriel D. . Munich and Memory: Architecture, Monuments, and the Legacy of the Third Reich . 2000 . University of California Press . 978-0520219106.
  4. Web site: Schleich, Erwin . Deutsche Biographie . de.
  5. Web site: Stadtpfarrkirche St. Peter, Wiederaufbau . mediaTUM . Universitätsbibliothek Technische Universität München . de.
  6. Web site: Ruffiniblock . mediaTUM . Universitätsbibliothek Technische Universität München . de.
  7. Web site: St. Ludwig . mediaTUM . Universitätsbibliothek Technische Universität München . de.
  8. Web site: Preysingpalais, Wiederaufbau . mediaTUM . Universitätsbibliothek Technische Universität München . de.
  9. Web site: Damenstiftskirche St. Anna, Wiederaufbau . mediaTUM . Universitätsbibliothek Technische Universität München . de.
  10. Web site: Hotel Bayerischer Hof, Wiederaufbau . mediaTUM . Universitätsbibliothek Technische Universität München . de.
  11. Web site: Kath.- Ukrainisches Zentrum . mediaTUM . Universitätsbibliothek Technische Universität München . de.
  12. Web site: Klosterkirche St. Anna . mediaTUM . Universitätsbibliothek Technische Universität München . de.
  13. Web site: Die Klosterkirche St. Anna im Lehel . Erzbistum München und Freising . de.
  14. Web site: Hl. Geist Kirche . mediaTUM . Universitätsbibliothek Technische Universität München . de.
  15. Web site: Altes Rathaus, Wiederaufbau Turm . mediaTum . Universitätsbibliothek Technische Universität München . de.
  16. Web site: Bayerischer Hof, Umbau Palais Montgelas . mediaTUM . Universitätsbibliothek Technische Universität München . de.
  17. Web site: Schloss Possenhofen, Umbau . mediaTUM . Universitätsbibliothek Technische Universität München . de.