Moss, Katie Nicole, 1982-2010-09-032010-09-032010-06https://hdl.handle.net/1794/10690vii, 82 p. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries. Search the library catalog for the location and call number.Adolf Loos is most widely known for his essay Ornament and Crime (Ornament und Verbrechen), in which he sarcastically compares architectural ornament to the tattoos of "savages." Loos sought to modernize Vienna through the introduction of American and British culture and was known as one of Austria's most notorious cultural critics. Celebrated for breaking with the historicist culture of the late nineteenth century, Loos is often heralded as the father of the Modem Movement, but many of his writings and designs contradict such a classification. This thesis will explore the origins and motives behind Loos' s conception of modernism to suggest a better understanding of his role as cultural critic and architect in Vienna as well as his relationship to the architects and architecture of the subsequent generation.en-USLoos, Adolf, 1870-1933. Ornament und VerbrechenOrnament und VerbrechenArchitecture -- Austria -- ViennaConstructing a Modem Vienna: The Architecture and Cultural Criticism of Adolf LoosArchitecture and Cultural Criticism of Adolf LoosThesis