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About the artist

Marcel Breuer (Pécs, 1902 – New York, 1981) was a Hungarian-American modernist and one of the most influential architects and furniture designers of the twentieth century. He is considered a key figure in the International Style and achieved worldwide fame for his groundbreaking contributions to both architecture and industrial design.

Breuer was educated at the Bauhaus in Germany, where he later also taught. In this context, he experimented with new materials and construction techniques, leading to his iconic designs in bent tubular steel. His most famous furniture design, the Wassily Chair (Model B3), is considered a milestone in the history of modern furniture design and symbolizes the Bauhaus philosophy of functionality, industrial production, and aesthetic clarity.

After emigrating to the United States, Breuer increasingly focused on architecture. He developed a powerful, monumental formal language in which concrete, geometry, and sculpturality take center stage. Among his most influential works are the former Whitney Museum of American Art in New York (now the Met Breuer), as well as numerous residences, university buildings, and religious architecture in Europe and the United States. These buildings are often considered among the pinnacles of Brutalism, without losing their modernist clarity.

Marcel Breuer is considered a visionary designer who managed to break down the boundaries between art, design, and architecture. His work has had a lasting influence on generations of architects and designers and is included in the collections of leading museums worldwide. His legacy constitutes a crucial chapter in the history of modernism.

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