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during Tall Ships Races 2015
In 1904 wooden Ålesund was totally erased by fire and in the few next years to be resurrected in Jugend Style or Art Nouveau still dominating downtown architecture .
homepage.ntlworld.com/philip.lewis100/Alesund,Aalesund,Ar...
An example of a 2D structure.
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Detail of the entrance columna of an Art Nouveau castle in Turku. (Canon EOS 50D + Sigma 85mm large-aperture tele)
Germany in the late 19th century "Jugend" was a cultural weekly publication. It soon became a style-setting icon that launched the German art nouveau movement, named Jugendstil after the magazine. Today, the word is still used by German graphic designers and by collectors who look for the uniquely German arts and crafts that came from this period. Georg Hirth, who started the magazine, was one of the most influential thinkers in Munich.
Jugendstil Artists for Jugend :Emil Hansen, called Nolde, (1867-1956) Hans Heinrich Christianson, Hugo Hoppner, also called Fidus, Ernst Barlach, Peter Behrens, Julius Klinger, Heinrich Kley.
Albertinkatu 27a. Architect Gustaf Estlander. Built 1906.
On the left Albertinkatu 27b, Klaus Groth, 1969.
Heinrich Kley
“Jugend” magazine
(1910)
*2 new volumes on the art of Heinrich Kley from Lost Art Books
Jugend: Münchner illustrierte Wochenschrift für Kunst und Leben (English: Youth: the illustrated weekly magazine of art and lifestyle of Munich)
was a magazine founded in 1896 by Georg Hirth.[15]. At the height of Art Nouveau it was instrumental in promoting the style in Germany. As a result, the magazine's name was adopted as the most common German-language term for the movement: Jugendstil ("Jugend-style"). Although in the early 20th century the word was only applied to two-dimensional examples of the graphic arts,[16] especially the forms of organic typography and graphic design found in and influenced by German-magazines like Jugend, Pan, and Simplicissimus, it is now broadly applied to the broader manifestations of Art Nouveau visual arts in Germany, the Netherlands, the Baltic states and Nordic countries.[8][17]
Heinrich Kley
“Jugend” magazine
(1912)
*2 new volumes on the art of Heinrich Kley from Lost Art Books
Heinrich Kley
“Jugend” magazine
(1925)
*2 new volumes on the art of Heinrich Kley from Lost Art Books
Germany in the late 19th century "Jugend" was a cultural weekly publication. It soon became a style-setting icon that launched the German art nouveau movement, named Jugendstil after the magazine. Today, the word is still used by German graphic designers and by collectors who look for the uniquely German arts and crafts that came from this period. Georg Hirth, who started the magazine, was one of the most influential thinkers in Munich.
Jugendstil Artists for Jugend :Emil Hansen, called Nolde, (1867-1956) Hans Heinrich Christianson, Hugo Hoppner, also called Fidus, Ernst Barlach, Peter Behrens, Julius Klinger, Heinrich Kley.
DEU; Germany, Hamburg, 2013, Binnenalster Hamburg, Aktion der Greenpeace Jugend, Protest zum Schutz der Arktis, Copyright photo: FRED DOTT, Hamburg, www.freddott.de, contact : fred.dott@t-online.de