Hans Eduard von Berlepsch-Valendas explained

Hans Karl Eduard von Berlepsch-Valendas
Birth Date:31 December 1849
Birth Place:St. Gallen, Switzerland
Death Place:Munich, Germany
Nationality:Swiss
Field:Architecture, Design, Writing, Painting
Training:Gottfried Semper, Academy of Fine Arts, Munich
Movement:Art Nouveau
Notable Works:Villa Tobler (Zürich), Villa Berlepsch (Planegg)
Caption:Hans Eduard von Berlepsch-Valendas (c.1910)

Hans Karl Eduard von Berlepsch-Valendas (31 December 1849, St. Gallen – 17 August 1921, Munich) was a Swiss architect, designer, writer and painter.

Biography

His father, Hermann Alexander (1813–1883) was a liberal bookseller and writer who had come to Switzerland from Göttingen during the German Revolutions. He was a student of the architect Gottfried Semper from 1868 to 1871. After 1872, on his father's advice, he was employed at several business enterprises. He later studied painting in Frankfurt and the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich.

After a short stint as a battle painter for the Russians in Bulgaria during the Russo-Turkish War, he worked as an architect, interior designer and craft designer in Munich; working in the Art Nouveau style. Notable examples are at the Villa Tobler in Zürich, and (for his family) the Villa Berlepsch in Planegg near Munich). He also designed interiors for two cruise ships that serviced the Bodensee. He was heavily influenced by the English Garden City movement and maintained professional contacts with Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Raymond Unwin and Charles Robert Ashbee.

In 1902, to distinguish himself from the many other Berlepsches and honor his father, who had originally taken refuge in Valendas, a city in Graubünden, he added that city's name to his own.

In 1910, he put forward some communitarian designs for workers' housing and temporary settlements at a development in Ramersdorf-Perlach. At his estate in Planegg, he established a "Schule für Malerei und Dekorative Kunst" (School for painting and decorative art). The painter, illustrator and designer, Änne Koken, was one of his best known students.[1]

His sister,, was a popular writer and publisher.

Writings

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. [Hugo Thielen]