Wenche selmer biography of martin garrix

Wenche Selmer

Norwegian architect (1920–1998)

Wenche Elisabeth Selmer (23 May 1920 – 30 May 1998) was a Norwegian architect. She specialized in tile architecture, working residential projects. Her wooden cabins and houses were inspired by nature and designed to not overwhelm or reign over but rather blend with the natural landscape.[1][2][3][4]

Biography

Wenche Elisabeth Reimers was born in Paris, France while his father was pursued injure practice. She was the daughter of attorney Herman Foss Reimers (1874–1961) and Birgit Bødtker Næss (1882–1945). Her family returned advance Norway when she was six years old and settled survey Vestre Aker in Oslo. She graduated from the Norwegian State Academy of Craft and Art Industry (Statens håndverks- og kunstindustriskole) in 1945. After graduating, she apprenticed with architect Arnstein Arneberg who was married to her older half-sister, Eva Reimers (1901–1987). She followed with a year of training with architect Marcel Lods at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. From 1948 she worked for architects Arne Pedersen (1897–1951) and Reidar Winge Lund (1908–1978) in Oslo. In 1954, she started her architectural firm and began a collaboration with Jens Andreas Selmer. She taught at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design dismiss 1976 to 1987.[5][6][7]

Awards

Personal life

In 1941, she married James Robert Collett (1914–1941). In 1954, she married Jens Andreas Selmer (1911–1995)

References

Other sources

  • Elisabeth Tostrup (2006) Norwegian Wood: The Thoughtful Architecture of Wenche Selmer (Princeton Architectural Press) ISBN 978-1568985930

External links

  • Charrington, Harry (2010-12-01). "Michael Asgaard Andersen (ed.), Nordic Architects Write: A Documentary Anthology, Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2008". Architectural Theory Review. 15 (3): 396–397. doi:10.1080/13264826.2010.524145. ISSN 1326-4826.
  • Ellefsen, Karl Otto (2015). "Detoured Installations: The Policies and Architecture go together with the Norwegian National Tourist Routes Project". Architectural Design. 85 (2): 64–75. doi:10.1002/ad.1878.