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・ Claire Allen (musician)
・ Claire and Friends
・ Claire Anderson
・ Claire Anderson (disc jockey)
・ Claire Annabel Caroline Grant Duff
・ Claire Armstrong
・ Claire Austin
・ Claire B. Bird
・ Claire B. Lang
・ Claire Baker
・ Claire Ball
・ Claire Barclay
・ Claire Barratt
・ Claire Baxter
・ Claire Bazy-Malaurie
Claire Beck Loos
・ Claire Bennet
・ Claire Berger
・ Claire Bergin
・ Claire Berlinski
・ Claire Bertschinger
・ Claire Betz
・ Claire Bevilacqua
・ Claire Beynon
・ Claire Bishop
・ Claire Blatchford
・ Claire Bloom
・ Claire Bolderson
・ Claire Bonenfant
・ Claire Boudreau


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Claire Beck Loos : ウィキペディア英語版
Claire Beck Loos

Claire Beck Loos was a photographer and writer, born in 1904 in Pilsen, Czechoslovakia. She was the third wife of early modern Czechoslovak-Viennese architect Adolf Loos.
Claire Beck's immediate and extended relations - the Beck, Hirsch, Turnowsky and Kraus families - and friends the Semmlers, were some of Loos' first clients. They hired him to remodel apartment interiors in Pilsen and Vienna, and it was there that Loos first began to open up the "interstitial spaces" between walls to create continuous rooms. These projects, among others, are highlighted in the traveling exhibition "Learning to Dwell: Adolf Loos in the Czech Lands" sponsored by the City of Prague Museum, which opened in Prague in 2008 and has travelled to Brno, Czech Republic; Torino, Italy; and the Royal Institute of British Architects in London.
Claire and Loos were engaged after Loos invited the Beck family to see a Josephine Baker performance in Vienna in the spring of 1929. They had a short and rushed engagement, due to her parents' opposition. They were married in Vienna on 18 July 1929. She was thirty-five years younger than he was. Because it was a mixed marriage, the Jewish community refused to execute the marriage. Loos and Claire were divorced on 30 April 1932.
Claire Beck Loos wrote ''Adolf Loos Privat'', a literary work of snapshot-like vignettes about Loos' character, habits and sayings, which was published by the Johannes-Presse in Vienna in 1936. The book was intended to raise funds for Adolf Loos' tomb, as he died destitute on 23 August 1933.
Following his death in 1933, Loos' body was later moved to Vienna's Zentralfriedhof to rest among the great artists and musicians of the city – including Arnold Schoenberg, Peter Altenberg, and Karl Kraus, all some of Loos' closest friends and associates.
Claire Beck Loos and her mother Olga Feigl Beck moved to Prague at the beginning of World War II, and were later deported to Theresienstadt concentration camp, Claire in 1941 and Olga in 1942. They were separately transported to Riga, Latvia where they were presumably shot on arrival in 1942.
==References==




抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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