ALBERT SCHICKEDANZ, Builder of the Műcsarnok
The Műcsarnok and the Millennium Memorial were the joint concept of Albert
Schickedanz and sculptor György Zala (whose exhibition is currently running at
the Műcsarnok). Both projects were completed by 1896 for the events celebrating
the millennium of the Magyars’ arrival in the Carpathian Basin (although all of the
sculptures were not fully installed until 1929). Andrássy út, the avenue completing
the Castle–Chain Bridge axis, was an ideal setting for a ceremonial promenade. The
Műcsarnok was to become an important venue among the Hungarian bourgeoisie
that had been given a new lease of life after the Reform era. An incredible feat in
both intellectual and practical terms, the planning and building of Heroes’ Square,
the Műcsarnok and the Museum of Fine Arts were the climax of a dazzling career.
How Schickedanz, a modest but versatile master builder, found himself in the
prime of his life at the helm of a megaproject (that would have been a test of any
celebrity architect’s mettle) in his newly-founded company, the elegant-sounding
Schickedanz-Herzog Architects, can be explained by his relentless pursuit of
perfection evident from his previous work. The success of his buildings and
spaces undoubtedly lies in their sacred and spiritual character, largely due to
Schickedanz’s generous treatment of space and mass, his sense of detail, respect
for tradition, knowledge of new materials and techniques and, not least, a monastic
dedication to his job.
Albert Schickedanz was born into a family of Saxon descent in 1846 in Bielsko Biala,
a small town in Silesia, then part of the Habsburg Empire. The family
moved to Késmárk [today Kezmarok, Slovakia] in 1848 and were living in Tokaj at
the time of the 1867 Compromise. In spite of his German origins, Schickedanz’s
father had fought in the 1848–1849 war of independence, for which he was even
sentenced to prison in a castle. Albert Schickedanz began his studies in 1865 at
the Politechnische Schule in Karlsruhe, but was forced to take on a job due to the
family’s financial circumstances. He first worked for Karl Tietz Architects in Vienna,
but moved to Pest in 1858 and served as a draughtsman in Miklós Ybl’s office for
over ten years while taking on design jobs for other architects too. He learnt to paint
in the studios of Károly Lotz and Bertalan Székely, which he made good use of in
Ybl’s office. He produced numerous watercolours to illustrate the plans of buildings
they were working on.