Abstract
Hitler dreamt of completely reshaping Germany’s architectural
landscape. For his Thousand-Year Reich, he preferred massive
neo-classical buildings that delivered a message of power, severity, and
stability. As a young man, Hitler had wanted to become an artist or an
architect himself but was denied admission to Vienna’s Academy of Fine
Arts. After becoming chancellor, Hitler continued to take a passionate
interest in art and architecture, putting both in the service of his
totalitarian state.
One of Hitler’s favorite architects was Paul Ludwig Troost
(1879-1934) (left). Troost, a member of the Nazi party since 1924, had
made a name for himself in 1931, when he remodelled the former Palais
Barlow into the Munich headquarters of the NSDAP (the building came to
be known as the “Brown House”). Construction on his most famous work,
the House of German Art, began in 1933. Troost’s enormous, colonnaded,
neo-classical museum was the Reich’s first representative monumental
structure. Troost would never see its completion, however, as he died in
January 1934, a few months after the cornerstone had been laid. (Work
continued under the direction of his wife, Gerdy Troost.) The museum
officially opened on July 18, 1937.