Designer of the Week: Grant Featherston
Posted by Manhattan Home Design on Jan 15th 2019
It’s been a while since we talked about a designer that wasn’t entirely American or European. The mid-century modernist movement spanned the entire world in many different ways, as we have mentioned before. In Australia, particularly, there were a lot of furniture designers and architects that adhered to mid-century trends and breakthroughs, even though most of them are now almost unk
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Designer of the Week: Peter Behrens
Posted by Manhattan Home Design on Jan 15th 2019
German designer and architect Peter Behrens was an influence to many in the modernist movement, including Bauhaus founder Walter Gropius and a large group of the school’s most notable alumni.
He was born in 1868 in Hamburg, North German Confederation. Like Gropius, he was born a wealthy man, and he attended prestigious European schools. Nonetheless, he would start his design career with an
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Designer of the week: Walter Gropius
Posted by Manhattan Home Design on Jan 15th 2019
It seems that finally our Designer of the Week series has led us to the source, the one person that started it all (at least at the Bauhaus). Walter Gropius is, to many people, the patriarch of European modernist design, and there are many reasons why, so let’s start digging.
Walter Adolph Georg Gropius was born in 1883 in Berlin, at the height of the German Empire. There’s a much-rep
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Designer of the Week: Frank Lloyd Wright
Posted by Manhattan Home Design on Jan 15th 2019
Furniture was an essential part of Frank Lloyd Wright’s philosophy and upbringing as a designer, even though most people know him as the creator of organic architecture. His most famous work, the Fallingwater house, sits atop a small waterfall in Pennsylvania, deep into the Laurel Highlands.
Frank Lincoln Wright was born in Wisconsin in 1867. Both of his parents were teachers, but his fathe
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