Edmund Schuchardt (January 27, 1889 – September 10, 1972) was a German architect and interior designer in Dresden who was persecuted by the Nazis.
[1][2] After 1930, he and his Jewish wife Fanny (née Dubliner) moved into an apartment in the Dürerbundhaus in Dresden-Blasewitz, where they shared a floor with the family of brother-in-law Kurt Fiedler.
[3][4] Because Schuchardt did not divorce his Jewish wife, the Nazis banned him from working and deported him to forced labor on November 9, 1944, in the Osterode mine, from which he was liberated by the American army.
In 1948, he became Professor at the Hochschule für Werkkunst Dresden, the successor to the School of Applied Arts.
He was repeatedly represented at art exhibitions in Dresden with architectural designs and drawings.