Jan Knothe (February 18, 1912 in Winnica â December 19, 1977 in Warsaw) was a Polish architect, artist, graphic designer, writer, poet and diplomat (Belgium, Syria).
Jan Knothe was an alumnus of the Wà Âadysà Âaw IV Gymnasium in Warsaw. Studied at the Faculty of Architecture at the University of Technology in Warsaw.
During World War II, as a prisoner of Oflag II-C prisoner-of-war camp, Knothe participated in the prisoners' cultural life. Wrote a sequence of Ramayana-based poems about Warsaw (lost during the camp's evacuation). Having mastered the Mahabharata poetry form, Knothe wrote a narrative poem about The Brave Sailor John Scolvus (Opowieà Âào dzielnym à ¼eglarzu Janie z Kolna), as well as, with Stanisà Âaw Michalski, worked on woodcuts, bookplates and camp stamps.
As an architect, Jan Knothe worked with a team of architects during the decade after World War II, carrying out the most important architectural investments for Warsaw:
Knothe was the laureate of many construction competitions during the years following World War II: co-author of the Mausoleum-Monument of Victory, Pià Âsudski Square, Ministry of Industry, SPOà ÂEM and PZM Headquarters, Warsaw-OkÃÂcie Airport (1947 building), reconstruction of St. Alexander's Church, Powszechny Dom Handlowy and the Ministry of Agriculture.
Knothe inter alia illustrated the Six Year Plan to Rebuild Warsaw (Szeà Âcioletni Plan Odbudowy Warszawy) (KsiÃ à ¼ka i Wiedza 1950). He was also an assistant at the Drawing Department of the Faculty of Architecture at the University of Technology in Warsaw, headed by Zygmunt Kamià Âski. Created his own artistic style, entwining thick hatches with clusters of dots.
Jan Knothe is the author of a placard about Warsaw from 1952.