Casa Llagostera, Cartagena
A 1916 Modernista house in Cartagena by Víctor Beltrí, its façade covered in vivid painted ceramic of Minerva and Mercury.
A 1916 Modernista house in Cartagena by Víctor Beltrí, its façade covered in vivid painted ceramic of Minerva and Mercury.
A 1914 Secession palace in Oradea by Kálmán Rimanóczy Jr., part of the city’s dense Art Nouveau ensemble.
A 1913 Viennese-Secession palace in Oradea by Ferenc Löbl, among the city’s most representative Art Nouveau buildings.
A 1914 Secession public baths in Timișoara by the city architect László Székely, a wavy-lined Art Nouveau landmark.
A 1912 Secession palace on Timișoara’s grand Victory Square by Lipót Baumhorn, anchoring one of Europe’s great Art Nouveau ensembles.
A 1909 Secession palace in Oradea by Komor and Jakab, another of the duo’s Art Nouveau landmarks in the city.
A 1909 Arte Nova house in Aveiro by Silva Rocha and Korrodi, now Portugal’s Art Nouveau Museum.
A 1903 Emil Vidor Art Nouveau apartment house in Budapest, perhaps the city’s most beautiful, now a museum of Hungarian Art Nouveau.
The flamboyant 1904 Secession palace the architect Ferenc Raichle built for himself in Subotica, now an art gallery.
A Modernista military club in Melilla, the North African city that became Spain’s second capital of Art Nouveau.