Viktor Kovačić


Viktor Kovačić was a Croatian architect and is often called "the father of modern Croatian architecture".

Life

He was born in 1874 in Ločendol near Rogaška Slatina, present-day Slovenia. After graduating from the Crafts School in Graz in 1891, at age of seventeen, he came to Zagreb where he was as a trainee in local construction firms.
He studied architecture the Akademie der bildenden Künste in Vienna and opened a studio in Zagreb in 1899. He was co-founder of the Club of Croatian Architects in 1906. He worked at the Engineering College in Zagreb from 1920, attaining a professorship in 1922. Viktor Kovačić died in Zagreb on October 21, 1924.

Work

The modern Croatian architecture appeared with Viktor Kovačić who was the first to speak against historicism and represented the idea that architecture must be individual and modern, but also practical and comfortable. From the thirties the works of “Zagreb school of architecture" can stand alongside the best world architecture. They are especially interesting because of merging of two opposite directions in architecture of those days – functionalist and organic. His projects are marked with subtle purity of reduced elements of historicism, like in monumental Stock Exchange Palace in Zagreb, 1924.
His most important works in Zagreb are: the Church of St Blaise ; the Stock Exchange Building ; the Villa Frangeš ; the Frank House ; the redevelopment of Jesuit Square ; the Villa Frölich ; the Slaveks Palace located on Svačićev square 13.

Awards

In 1925, a year after his death, he was posthumously awarded a Grand Prix in Arts and Crafts on the Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes in Paris.

Legacy

After the World War II the Life Achievement Award for architects in Croatia was named "Viktor Kovačić".