Career
His style is difficult to classify. Metzer learned the craft of stone-cutting in Breslau with Christian Behrens and did apprenticeships in Saxony through 1894. He founded his own studio in Berlin in 1896 and worked predominantly for the royal porcelain factory until 1903, and became a professor at the Vienna college of arts and sciences.
Among his important works are the sculptures for Josef Hoffmann"s 1904–1911 landmark Art Deco Palais Stoclet in Brussels, including the eccentric four green male nudes at the summit of the building.
The Palais Stoclet is an example of "Gesamtkunstwerk", the integration of art and architecture, one of the goals of Jugendstil. In 1910 Metzner met the vacationing Frank Lloyd Wright and, according to the scholarship of Anthony Alofsin, Metzer had an impact on Wright"s "conventionalization" of the human figure and its incorporation into buildings like the Larkin Building and Midway Gardens.
Around the same time, Metzner"s designs influenced Czechoslovakian artists working in Prague, Stanislav Sucharda among them. A famous work is the 1913 Völkerschlachtdenkmal (People"s Battle Monument), designed by the architect Bruno Schmitz in Leipzig.
Metzner executed the powerful and strangely scaled interior figural-architectural sculpture in the "Hecker Tomb" with his teacher Behrens.
Much of Metzner"s work in Germany was lost in World World War World War II