![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Upon his return from Italy in 1897, he joined Wagner's architectural firm, and in the same year he joined the new movement launched by Wagner, Gustav Klimt, and others the Society of Austrian Fine Artists, better known as the Vienna Secession. Under Wagner's guidance, Hoffman's graduation project, an updated Renaissance building, won the Prix de Rome and allowed Hoffmann to travel and study for a year in Italy. In 1895, Hoffman, together with Olbrich, Koloman Moser and Carl Otto Czeschka and several others, founded a group called the Siebener Club, a forerunner of the future Vienna Secession. There he also met another rising architect of the time, Joseph Maria Olbrich. In 1892 he began his studies at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna under Karl Freiherr von Hasenauer and Otto Wagner, two of the most prestigious architects of the period. In 1887 he transferred instead to the Higher School of Arts and Crafts State in Brno / BrĂ¼nn beginning in 1887 where he received his baccalaureate in 1891. He later described his school years as "a shame and a torture which poisoned my youth and left me with a feeling of inferiority which has lasted until this day." His father encouraged him to become a lawyer or a civil servant, and sent him to a prestigious upper school, but he was very unhappy there. His father was modestly wealthy, the co-owner of a textile factory, and mayor of the small town. Hoffmann was born in Brtnice / Pirnitz, Moravia (now part of the Czech Republic), Austria-Hungary. Austria Pavilion at the Venice Biennale (1934). ![]()
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