And even though the Secession and Art Nouveau were led by artists who were also sick of traditionalist architecture and art, known as "Revivalism" or "Historicism", they didn't go far enough for Alfred Loos.
He had seen the future, and he wanted to make it happen.
He had seen the future, and he wanted to make it happen.
He also argued that ornamentation and any artistic design on a building's exterior was a waste of resources and labour, forcing craftsmen to do fundamentally useless and poorly paid work.
Ornamentation was not "rational" to Loos, and therefore belonged in the past.
Ornamentation was not "rational" to Loos, and therefore belonged in the past.
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