Bernhard Schreiber
Appearance
Karl Friedrich Bernhard Schreiber (September 19, 1833 – March 5, 1894) was a German architect.[1]
About
[edit]Schreiber studied at the Dresden Art Academy with Georg Hermann Nicolai . Between 1858 and 1866 he worked in partnership with the architect Ernst Giese . He was known for a "close connection to Nicolai " and for the "early use of the German Renaissance".[2][1]
Schreiber died in Dresden in 1894 and was buried in the Old Annen Cemetery.[3][4]
Notable works
[edit]- 1862/1870: Gauernitz , reconstruction of the castle in the style of the Saxon Renaissance Revival Architecture (with Ernst Giese)[1]
- 1868: Dresden, conversion of the “Lodge to the bronze pillars” at Bautzner Strasse 19 in the style of the Nicolai school with a pilaster architecture[1]
- 1868/1869: Dresden, Villa Pilz , Parkstrasse 4[5]
- 1872/1874: Dresden, Villa Tasch , Bernhardstrasse 6[6]
- 1871/1873: Dresden, Albert Theater[6]
- 1872/1874: Dresden, Palais Kap-herr , Parkstrasse 7[6]
- 1872/1874: Teplitz , Altes Stadttheater (construction management: Hermann Rudolph )[5]
- 1884/1885: Constappel , conversion of the Constappel church
Literature
[edit]- Helas, Volker; Classen, Martin (1991). Villenarchitektur Dresden (in German). B. Taschen. ISBN 978-3-8228-9755-3.
- Klimpel, Volker (2002). Berühmte Dresdner: historisch-biographisches Handbuch bedeutender Persönlichkeiten, geboren in Dresden (in German). Hellerau-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-910184-85-5.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "TEPLICE///TEPLITZ - architektura na severu Čech". teplice-teplitz.net. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
- ^ "Tafel 1559, Karl Friedrich Bernhard Schreiber :: Stadtmuseum Dresden :: museum-digital:deutschland". sachsen.museum-digital.de.
- ^ Dresden, SLUB. "Dresdner Geschichtsblätter". digital.slub-dresden.de (in German).
- ^ Todtenschau. In: Dresden History Pages, No. 3, 1894, S. 150.
- ^ a b "U Císařských lázní Teplice - centrum". teplice-teplitz.net. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
- ^ a b c Helas, Volker; Claben, Martin (1991). "Villenarchitektur / Villa Architecture in Dresden". Benedikt Taschen.