Géza Maróti

Géza Maróti's plan of Atlantis mock-up

Géza Maróti (1875-1941) was a Hungarian architect, sculptor, painter, and applied artist.[1]

Maróti was from a rural merchant family and began his career as a woodcarver but later went on to complete studies in Budapest and Vienna.[1] He settled in Zebegeny before the outbreak of World War I and went on to complete numerous commissions both as an architect and a sculptor for public building projects. His work, a cultural history of Atlantis, is still unpublished.

The eclectic building of the Liszt Ferenz Music Academy (1907) in Budapest which is adorned with Maroti's sculptures

Major works[edit]

Buildings with sculptures executed by Maróti, unless otherwise indicated.

  • 1904–1907. Franz Liszt Academy of Music, Budapest.
  • 1905. Gresham Palace, Budapest.
  • Lending bank, Budapest.
  • Trading Bank, Budapest.
  • 1905–1910. Pest National Savings Company, Budapest.
  • 1906. International Exhibition Pavilion, Milano. The original burned down, although it won Maróti a number of awards and prizes.
  • 1908. Palacio de Bellas Artes, Mexico City, Mexico: dome, sculptures, mosaic work.
  • 1911. World Exhibition Pavilion, Turin, Italy.
  • 1912–1914. Maróti Villa, Zebegény, Hungary: sculptures and fountains.
  • 1927–1932. Detroit, United States. Various bronze and granite sculptures and decorations.
  • Detroit: Fisher Building, Livingstone Memorial Lighthouse, Cranbrook Academy of Art Museum, Foreman Bank Building, Hurison Motor Co. Building (likely the Hudson Motor Car Company building), Times Building, S.S. Kresge Building.
  • Plans for oval and university sport precinct, Lágymányos, Hungary. (Never built.)
  • 1938. Hero's Square with Christ sculpture, Zebegény. Unfinished due to World War II and subsequent Soviet takeover of power.
  • 1933–1940. More than 600-page study on the lost city of Atlantis. Finished in German and translated into English, but never published.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Maróti Géza, Hungarian Electronic Library, retrieved 13 May 2012 (in Hungarian)