Margot Wittkower | |
---|---|
Born | August 28, 1902 |
Died | July 3, 1995 | (aged 92)
Nationality | German |
Occupation | Art historian |
Margot Wittkower, née Margot Holzmann (August 28, 1902 – July 3, 1995), [1] was a German-American Interior designer and art historian specializing in neo- Palladian architecture and Italian Renaissance and Baroque period.
Born August 28, 1902, as Margot Holzmann in Berlin, Germany. [1] She was primarily an artist but later established herself as an interior designer. She met her future husband Rudolf Wittkower when she was just age 16 however they waited until 1923 to marry, due to their young ages. [2]
Rudolf began teaching at Cologne University in 1932, but because Wittkower was Jewish, she was forced to leave Germany due to Nazi control. In 1933 the couple moved to London. Margot specialized in apartment interiors and furniture design at this time and both husband and wife were drawn to neo-Palladian architecture. Starting around the mid-1950s she co-authored various books with her husband, many of which are significant today in the area of Italian Art History. [3] Together they documented in their writings the change from craftsmen to artist during the Renaissance. [4] She died at age 93 at her home in Manhattan. [5]
Margot Wittkower | |
---|---|
Born | August 28, 1902 |
Died | July 3, 1995 | (aged 92)
Nationality | German |
Occupation | Art historian |
Margot Wittkower, née Margot Holzmann (August 28, 1902 – July 3, 1995), [1] was a German-American Interior designer and art historian specializing in neo- Palladian architecture and Italian Renaissance and Baroque period.
Born August 28, 1902, as Margot Holzmann in Berlin, Germany. [1] She was primarily an artist but later established herself as an interior designer. She met her future husband Rudolf Wittkower when she was just age 16 however they waited until 1923 to marry, due to their young ages. [2]
Rudolf began teaching at Cologne University in 1932, but because Wittkower was Jewish, she was forced to leave Germany due to Nazi control. In 1933 the couple moved to London. Margot specialized in apartment interiors and furniture design at this time and both husband and wife were drawn to neo-Palladian architecture. Starting around the mid-1950s she co-authored various books with her husband, many of which are significant today in the area of Italian Art History. [3] Together they documented in their writings the change from craftsmen to artist during the Renaissance. [4] She died at age 93 at her home in Manhattan. [5]