David Ultrath takes pictures of Retweld Shrowder House
German photographer David Ultrath Gives a visual story of one of the most radical houses of architectural modernism – Ritwell Shrodeer House in YouTract, NetherlandsDesigned in 1924 Gerit Retweld For the Dutch Sochelight Trusteer-Scrater, the house de stands as a three-dimensional manifesto of the Stegle movement. Through the crisp compositions of the ultrath, series One provides a new approach to a house, which a century later, still feels that it is of the future.
All pictures by David Ultrath
D Stegle’s legacy lives in utrete
Ultrath Images Reveal the innovative structure of the residence, draw attention to the relationship formed by lines, planes and bold primary colors that create its visual language. Some dissolve the division between the inner corners, sliding panels, and jutting aircraft, with the retoured inside and outside. Ultrath put his lens on this interplay of openness with accuracy, allowing light and shadow to consciousness the geometric rigidity of architecture.
The adaptable interior layout of RITEVELD Schröder House, where the walls run and the rooms move to adjust the daily life, survive through the series of ultrath. His shots focus on architectural decisions that challenged the rigorous domestic criteria of the 1920s, instead proposed a flexible, living architecture contained in abstract, freedom and clarity. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is one of the few manufactured manifestations of the day stegle principles in The Deling Architecture.
David Ultrath gave a scene of one of the most radical houses of architecturalism.
Retweld Shrodeer House was designed by Geritic Retweld in 1924 at Utrect
The house stands as a three-dimensional manifesto of the Style Movement