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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Maja_SacherMaja Sacher - Wikipedia

    Maja Sacher (7 August 1896 – 8 August 1989) was a Swiss art collector and philanthropist. Tomb of Maja Sacher Early life and education. She was born in 1896 to the architect Fritz Stehlin and Helene von Bavier. She studied sculpture in Munich and was taught by Antoine Bourdelle in Paris.

  2. Maja Sacher’s contacts in the world of fine arts helped Rohn to commission superlative pieces for Roche from such artists as Henry Moore, Eduardo Chillida, Ödon Koch or Bernhard Luginbühl. She not only influenced the company’s strategy until her death in 1989, but nearly all building projects and the interior spaces of Roche.

  3. Maja Sacher, auch Maja Sacher-Hoffmann und Maja Hoffmann-La Roche, vor ihrer zweiten Ehe Maja Hoffmann-Stehlin (* 7. August 1896 in Basel als Marie-Anne; † 8. August 1989 in Frenkendorf ), war die Witwe des Emanuel Hoffmann, eines Sohnes von Fritz Hoffmann-La Roche, dem Begründer des Basler Pharma-Unternehmens Roche Holding .

  4. Sculpting a family legacy of art and culture. A few years after Fritz’s death in 1920, his youngest son Emanuel and his fabulously artistic wife, Maja, began repurchasing Roche stocks from shareholders in order to regain the family’s influence on the business.

  5. Jun 18, 2015 · Hoffmann-Stehlin (who became Maja Sacher in 1934 when she remarried) was a powerful president, reigning supreme in the role until 1979 (she died in 1989).

  6. www.basler-in.ch › post › porträt-maja-sacher-stehlinPORTRÄT – MAJA SACHER-STEHLIN

    Feb 24, 2020 · PORTRÄT. Eine Ikone der Gegenwartskunst – Kunst bestimmte ihr Leben. Und sie selber bestimmte mit, wie bedeutend Basel heute in Bezug auf die Gegenwartskunst ist: Maja Sacher-Stehlin. Die 1896 geborene Architekten-tochter studierte in München Bildhauerei und ging in Paris beim Bildhauer Antoi­.

  7. Maja Sacher, the daughter-in-law of Roches founder, went above and beyond to regain control of her family’s business after fear of bankruptcy forced the company to go public in 1919.