Joseph Hofmarcher (born. 1982 in Austria)
is an Artist & Architectural Designer specialized in the field of Metaldesign within his area of origin Eisenstraße within the Austrian Alps.
Besides designing on hand, he also curated symposia and exhibitions, held lectures and is permanently researching.
Curriculum Vitae
adjective
2 based on valid reason or good judgement: sound advice for healthy living | the scientific content is sound. • competent, reliable, or holding acceptable views: he's very sound onhis law.
3 (of sleep) deep and undisturbed. a doze that deepened into a sound sleep. [...]
adverb
soundly: he was sound asleep.
DERIVATIVES
soundly adverb, soundness noun
ORIGIN Middle English: from Old English gesund, of West Germanic origin; related to Dutch gezond and German gesund .
Oxford Dictionary of English, Copyright © 2010, 2013 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
architecture |ˈɑːkɪtɛktʃə|
noun [ mass noun ]
1 the art or practice of designing and constructing buildings. schools of architecture and design. • the style in which a building is designed and constructed [...]
2 the complex or carefully designed structure of something: the chemical architecture of the human brain. • the conceptual structure and logical organization [...]
DERIVATIVES
architectural |-ˈtɛktʃ(ə)r(ə)l| adjective, architecturally |-ˈtɛktʃ(ə)r(ə)li| adverb
Oxford Dictionary of English, Copyright © 2010, 2013 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
Joseph about his living and work ambience...
collective |kəˈlɛktɪv|
adjective
done by people acting as a group: a collective protest. • relating to or shared by all the members of a group: ministers who share collective responsibility | a collective sigh of relief from parents. • taken as a whole; aggregate: the collective power of the workforce.
noun
a cooperative enterprise. the anarchist collective and bookshop. • a collective farm.
DERIVATIVES
collectively adverb, collectiveness noun, collectivity |-ˈtɪvɪti| noun
ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense ‘representing many individuals’): from Old French collectif, -ive or Latin collectivus, from collect- ‘gathered together’, from the verb colligere (see collect1) .
Oxford Dictionary of English, Copyright © 2010, 2013 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.