Hans Noë

Hans Noë (June 18, 1928 – May 11, 2025) was an American architect, sculptor and proprietor of the Fanelli Cafe in New York City.[1]

Life and career

Noë was born in Cernăuți (German: Czernowitz) in the Kingdom of Romania, a city then populated by a large number of German-speaking Jews,[2] and now called Chernivtsi and located in Ukraine.[1][3] Noë's Jewish family was imprisoned in the city's ghetto and in a ghetto in Bucharest during World War II.[1]

After the war, they spent time in German refugee camps. Noë studied at the institution now known as the Hochschule für Gestaltung Offenbach am Main. His family arrived in New York in 1949.[1]

Noë continued his studies at the Cooper Union and served in the U.S. Army after being drafted. After his military service, he studied at the Illinois Institute of Technology. As an architect, he became a student and protégé of Mies van der Rohe, who was teaching there.[3][1]

Noë's sculpture was the subject of a retrospective at the National Museum of Mathematics in 2023.[4]

Noë died in Garrison, New York on May 11, 2025, at the age of 96. His son Alva Noë is a philosopher.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Heinrich, Will (21 May 2025). "Hans Noë, Architect, Sculptor and Proprietor of a Famed Bar, Dies at 96". New York Times. Retrieved 27 May 2025.
  2. ^ Moser, Joseph W. (2016). "From Czernowitz to the German Order of Merit: A Memoir of Cultural History and Autobiography by Bianca Rosenthal (review)". Journal of Austrian Studies. 49 (3): 143–145. ISSN 2327-1809. Retrieved 30 May 2025.
  3. ^ a b Roche, Daniel Jonas (22 May 2025). "Hans Noë—"hiding master" sculptor, architect, and Tony Smith, Barnett Newman, and Mies van der Rohe protégé—dies at 96". Architect’s Newspaper. Retrieved 27 May 2025.
  4. ^ Roche, Daniel Jonas (29 September 2023). "Hans Noë, a long overlooked artist, Mies protégé, and "hiding master," is on display at Manhattan's National Museum of Mathematics". Architect’s Newspaper. Retrieved 27 May 2025.