Karl Moser
life
Karl Moser (August 10, 1860–February 28, 1936) was an architect from Switzerland. Between 1887 and 1915 he worked together with Robert Curjel in Karlsruhe.
In 1928 he was president of the newly founded Congrès International d'Architecture Moderne, an organisation, steered prominently by the pioneers of modernism, architects Le C Indeed, at was at this time that Moser's own work changed radically towards modernism, exemplified in the St. Anthony's (Anoniuskirche) in Basel (1925-27), built in reinforced concrete rather than brick and stone typical for his earlier works.orbusier and Walter Gropius, which championed rational and functionalist architecture, while critiquing the type of revivalist architecture typified by Moser's own work.
In 1928 he was president of the newly founded Congrès International d'Architecture Moderne, an organisation, steered prominently by the pioneers of modernism, architects Le C Indeed, at was at this time that Moser's own work changed radically towards modernism, exemplified in the St. Anthony's (Anoniuskirche) in Basel (1925-27), built in reinforced concrete rather than brick and stone typical for his earlier works.orbusier and Walter Gropius, which championed rational and functionalist architecture, while critiquing the type of revivalist architecture typified by Moser's own work.