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Otto Eglau was a German graphic artist.
During World War II he served in the Nazi army and was a prisoner of war. After his liberation, Eglau studied at the Berlin Academy of Art and taught free drawing and painting at the Technical University of Berlin. Between 1951 and 1970, Eglau made study trips around the world and taught etching technique at the International Summer Academy of Fine Arts in Salzburg. From 1983 until his death in 1988, he worked alternately in studios in Berlin and on the island of Sylt.
Marcel Lajos Breuer was a Hungarian American modernist architect and furniture designer. He moved to the United States in 1937 and became a naturalized American citizen in 1944.
At the Bauhaus he designed the Wassily Chair and the Cesca Chair, which The New York Times have called some of the most important chairs of the 20th century. Breuer extended the sculpture vocabulary he had developed in the carpentry shop at the Bauhaus into a personal architecture that made him one of the world's most popular architects at the peak of 20th-century design. His work includes art museums, libraries, college buildings, office buildings, and residences. Many are in a Brutalist architecture style, including the former IBM Research and Development facility which was the birthplace of the first personal computer. He is regarded as one of the great innovators of modern furniture design and one of the most-influential exponents of the International Style.