Károly Kós was a Hungarian architect, writer, illustrator, ethnologist and politician of Austria-Hungary and Romania.
Education
Born in Temesvár, Austria-Hungary (now Timișoara, Romania), he studied engineering at the University of Budapest, and only afterwards turned towards architecture (graduating from the Budapest Architecture School in 1907). During the 1910s, he completed the Reformed Cock Church in Kolozsvár (a city later known as Cluj or Cluj-Napoca) and the hospital in Sepsiszentgyörgy (Sfântu Gheorghe).
Career
Already during his studies and at the start of his career, he had a special interest for the historical and traditional folk architecture, and made study trips to Kalotaszeg and the Székely Land. At the time, his style was influenced by the Vienna Secession and Art Nouveau. In 1914, at the start of World War I, Kós moved to Stana (Sztána).
He was drafted the following year, but soon discharged on request from the Ministry of Culture.
Between 1917 and 1918, he was sent on a study trip to Istanbul. In 1918, Kós was asked to be a professor of the College for Applied Arts of Budapest, but he declined, wishing to return to Transylvania.
Kós also edited its illustrated political journal Vasárnap. In 1924, he and several of his friends founded a publishing house under the name Erdélyi Szépmíves Céh ("Transylvanian Guild of Fine Arts").
From 1931, he was editor of the Erdélyi Helikon, and manager of the Miklós Barabás Guild (an independent interest group of Hungarian artists in Romania).
In 1944 his house in Stana (part of Northern Transylvania) was plundered, and he fled to Cluj, where he rejoined his family. He was director of the Transylvanian Hungarian Economic Association. Kós taught at the College for Agriculture in Cluj until 1953, filling the post of the dean in 1945, and contributed to the journal Világosság between 1948-1949.
He died in Cluj.
1908-1910
Reformed Parish Church, Obuda
Zoo buildings, Budapest. With Dezső Zrumeczky
the Varjuvar, Kós" house in Sztana
1910-1913
Városmajor Street, Budapest. With Dénes Györgyi
Wekerle estate, Budapest
Székely National Museum, Sfântu Gheorghe (Sepsiszentgyörgy)
Church with the Rooster, Cluj
1930s and 1940s
Kós" house in Miskolc
Exhibition Hall, Cluj
King Matthias House restoration, Cluj
Milk hall, Mera village, Baciu.
Politics
He lived off commissions and started a political career, choosing, unlike many in the Hungarian community, to accept the Romanian Kingdom"s administration in the region as a given, while engaging in active opposition inside its legal framework (and authoring a manifesto calling on others to do the same). Alongside Lajos Albrecht and others, he was one of the founders of the Transylvanian People"s Party in 1921 — the group later formed the Magyar Party.
Membership
As a politician, he was the president of the Hungarian People"s Union (Magyar Népi Szövetség, MNSz), and afterwards member of the Assembly of Deputies (1946-1948).