Teodor Talowski

Teodor Talowski
Born (1857-03-23)March 23, 1857
Zasów, Galicia, Austria-Hungary (now Poland)
Died May 1, 1910(1910-05-01) (aged 53)
Lviv, Galicia, Austria-Hungary (now Ukraine)
Nationality Polish
Occupation Architect
Practice Lviv Polytechnic
Buildings Church of St. Elizabeth, Lviv

Teodor Marian Talowski (born March 23, 1857 in Zasów, died May 1, 1910 in Lviv) was a Polish architect and painter. Because of his style, which combined late Historicism with Art Nouveau and Modernist influences, he has been described as "the Polish Gaudi".[1] His works include apartment buildings, churches, chapels and public buildings in Kraków, Lviv and other cities throughout former Austrian Galicia.

Biography

Talowski was born in Zassów (now Zasów) near Tarnów, in Austrian Galicia, and attended a gymnasium in Kraków. Later he moved to Vienna, where he studied architecture under Karl König. After two years he moved to Lviv (Polish: Lwów, German: Lemberg), to study under Julian Zachariewicz at Lviv Polytechnic, from which he graduated in 1881. He came back to Kraków to be a professor at the Higher School of Technology and Industry (Polish: Wyższa Szkoła Techniczo-Przemysłowa). In 1901 he was appointed the chair of the Department of Drawing and later the Department of Medieval Architecture Composition at Lviv Polytechnic.

He died in 1910 in Lviv after five years of poor health and was interred at the Rakowicki Cemetery in Kraków.

Main Works

Residential buildings

Some of Talowski's houses at Retoryka street, Kraków. From the left - numbers 9th-1st
  1st Retoryka Street - Under the Singing Frog (Pol. Pod śpiewającą żabą), 1889–90
  7td Retoryka Street - Festina Lente, 1887
  9th Retoryka Street - Under the Ass (Pod Osłem), 1891
  15th Retoryka Street - Think Long, Act Fast (Długo myśl, prędko czyń), 1888

Churches

Talowski designed over 70 churches, including:

Church of St. Elizabeth in Lviv

Other works

References

  1. Maciej Gutowski, Bartłomiej Gutowski, Architektura Secesyjna w Galicji, DiG publishing, Warsaw 2001, p. 27

Sources

  Maciej Gutowski, Bartłomiej Gutowski, Architektura Secesyjna w Galicji, DiG publishing, Warsaw 2001, p. 23-27 (in Polish).

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