Bruno Erich Werner (5 September 1896, Leipzig – 21 January 1964, Davos) was a German philologist, publicist, writer, critic and diplomat.
Werner's taste in art and architecture was influenced by the Modernist and Bauhaus movements and he was later keenly interested in Expressionism.
He married Katharina Kluger (born in Silesia) whom he met while studying art history under Heinrich Wölfflin.
[2][3] Around the time that the Russian army was advancing towards Berlin in early 1945, Werner hid his daughters to a convent in Bavaria and went into hiding from the Nazis.
[4] He recounted his wartime experiences in his 1949 book Die Galeere.