Hugo Slevogt

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Hugo Karl Heinrich Slevogt (born October 28, 1857 in Karlsruhe ; † December 16, 1926 there ) was one of the most important Karlsruhe architects of the early days .

Life

Hugo Slevogt comes from a well-known family of artists, his father was the court theater painter Adolf Slevogt. Slevogt studied architecture at the Technical University of Karlsruhe . After two years of practical apprenticeship at the Archbishop's Building Department under Adolf Williard , he went to Paris, where he completed his studies at the École des Beaux-Arts . As part of his practical work, his work on the Le Bon Marché department store and on the Gambetta monument at Boileau became known. After his four-year stay in Paris, a brief practice with Franz von Hoven in Frankfurt followed; then he settled in Karlsruhe as an independent private architect.

Hugo Slevogt was married to Sofie Volk (1878–1938) since 1902. He died in Karlsruhe in 1926.

plant

Almost all of its buildings that survived the world wars are now cultural monuments.

Buildings in Karlsruhe

  • 1885: Südendstrasse 7; (Rear building, (no cultural monument) front building 1907–1909 ("1908") by Billing & Zoller)
  • 1888: Hirschstrasse 92; Rental house (with Theodor Kempermann)
  • 1888: Kaiserallee 51a; Rental house (with Theodor Kempermann), for KF Schmeiser, coal merchant
  • 1891: Uhlandstrasse 26; Rental house with restaurant “Württemberger Hof” (with Theodor Kempermann) for Friedrich Schäfer, landlord
  • 1892: Scheffelstrasse 64; (with Theodor Kempermann)
  • 1896: Gartenstrasse 54–56; Duplex house
  • 1897: Winterstrasse 23
  • 1897/1898: Bahnhofstrasse 14; Rental house
  • 1897: Kaiserstraße 14a
  • 1897: Karlstrasse 87
  • 1897: Karlstrasse 89; Apartment building with shop (with Theodor Kempermann)
  • 1897: Körnerstrasse 37; Apartment building with rear building (with Theodor Kempermann) for master tin maker August Goldschmidt.
  • 1898: Hirschstrasse 103; Villa for Emma von Lindenau, with front garden fence; 1919 converted into an infant hospital; since 1990 Catholic university community with student residence
  • 1901: Grünwinkler Strasse 10
  • 1901: Hirschstrasse 97
  • 1903: Hirschstrasse 113; Rental house
  • 1903: Winterstrasse 29; St.Joseph's House of the Gengenbach Franciscan Sisters (not a cultural monument)
  • 1904: Karlstrasse 91; Slevogt himself lived in this house and had his office in the rear building. After his death, his son continued to live here, he was a répétiteur at the Karlsruhe State Theater. After a bad divorce, his daughter was transferred to this house, who had bad memories of the house due to her parents' difficult divorce and sold it to the current owners.
  • 1905: Grünwinkler Straße 10: the Bulach town hall, today Bulach primary school
  • 1905: Marie-Alexandra-Strasse 33–35

Individual evidence

  1. Death register StA Karlsruhe No. 1766/1926
  2. Hugo Slevogt †. In: Die Baugilde, vol. 9 (1927) p. 330.
  3. Marriage register StA Rastatt, No. 12/1902