The Bauhaus buildings in Weimar and Dessau may be monuments, but they are by no means relics of a bygone era. Relying on the Bauhaus pioneering spirit, they are used today for teaching and research based on fresh ideas.
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10 essential facts about Bauhaus
Germany is launching the 100th anniversary of the influential school of design. Revisit the history and the ideas promoted by the Bauhaus.
Image: picture alliance/dpa/J. Wolf
It started as an actual school
In 1919, Walter Gropius became the director of a new institution, the Staatliches Bauhaus, also simply known as the Bauhaus, which merged the former Grand Ducal School of Arts and Crafts and the Weimar Academy of Fine Art. Even though Gropius was an architect and the term Bauhaus literally translates as "construction house," the school of design did not have an architecture department until 1927.
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo
It was against the arts' class snobbery
In a pamphlet for an April 1919 exhibition, Gropius stated that his goal was "to create a new guild of craftsmen, without the class distinctions which raise an arrogant barrier between craftsman and artist." Combining influences from modernism, the English Arts and Crafts movement, and Constructivism, Gropius promoted the idea that design was to serve the community.
Image: picture-alliance/akg-images
It proved that the functional needn't be boring
The most basic principle of the movement of the Bauhaus school was "form follows function." According to this idea, simple but elegant geometric shapes were designed based on the intended function or purpose of a building or an object. Illustrating this concept, the pieces of this chess game designed by Josef Hartwig (1923-24) are stylized to suggest how each of them moves and its rank of power.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/O.Berg
It promoted the idea of the 'total work of art'
The interdisciplinary approach of the school's professors and students meant that visual arts, graphic design, architecture as well as product and furniture design all came into conversation with how people lived in the modern world. They thereby actualized the concept of the "Gesamtkunstwerk," or complete work of art. This photo shows the interior of the Bauhaus school in Dessau.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
It included several influential artists
The school had many major artists among its teachers. This photo from 1926 features, from left to right, Josef Albers, Hinnerk Scheper, Georg Muche, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Herbert Bayer, Joost Schmidt, Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer, Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Lyonel Feininger, Gunta Stölzl and Oskar Schlemmer. Hannes Meyer and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe were also directors of the school.
Image: picture-alliance/akg-images
Bauhaus artists held legendary costume parties
Although the Bauhaus is associated with minimalist design, students and teachers invested an unsuspected amount of energy in creating surreal costumes for parties, as reported by Farkas Molnar in his 1925 essay, "Life at the Bauhaus." The parties began as improvised events but were later turned into large-scale productions, such as Oskar Schlemmer's "Triadic Ballet" from 1922 (photo).
Image: Getty Images/P. Macdiarmid
The institution closed several times
Political tensions led to different closures of the school. After being based in Weimar from 1919 to 1925, the Bauhaus moved to Dessau (picture). When the Nazis gained control of the city council there, the school closed again in 1932 and was reopened in Berlin. It was closed permanently in April 1933, pressured by the Nazi regime, which criticized the institution for producing "degenerate art."
Image: picture alliance/dpa/J. Wolf
Its ideals nevertheless spread worldwide
Even though the Bauhaus school was closed, different members of its staff kept spreading its idealistic concepts after they fled Germany. For example, many Jewish architects of the Bauhaus school contributed to the White City of Tel Aviv (picture), where a collection of 4,000 buildings were designed in the Bauhaus style. It is a UNESCO World Cultural Heritage site.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/P. Grimm
It still influences designers today
Though today people might most commonly associate modern, affordable, modular furniture with Ikea, the concept wasn't born in Sweden, but rather inspired by the classic works of Bauhaus designers. This photo shows tubular furniture designed by Marcel Breuer and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe from 1927 to 1930.
Image: picture-alliance/ dpa
Germany launches its 2019 Bauhaus centenary
The Bauhaus school turns 100 in 2019. Germany's major celebratory program involves not only the three museums housed in the former schools in Weimar, Dessau and Berlin (picture), but also at least 10 of the country's 16 federal states will participate. Expect several exhibitions, events, publications — and even new museums.
Image: picture alliance/Arco Images/Schoening
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When children living in Weimar in the 1920s did not obey, people said: "If you are not good, then you will be put in the Bauhaus." It was "crazy people" who lived at the art school — who danced noisily through the streets in colorful theater costumes and painted pictures using triangles, circles and squares.
Today, students from all over the world come to study at the successor institution, Bauhaus University in Weimar. With nearly 4,100 students from 70 countries, it is one of the most international universities in Germany.
The Bauhaus sites in Weimar and Dessau have been UNESCO World Heritage Sites since 1996. This attracts tourists and students alike.
The idea of interdisciplinary work
There are no more workshops for painting, furniture building, weaving or metal in the historic and new buildings of Bauhaus University. Originally, under the leadership of founding director Walter Gropius, artists and craftsmen were intended to work together and learn from each other. Today, the university offers departments of architecture and urbanism, art and design, civil engineering and media.
However, the idea that students can work in individual modules and projects across departments lives on, especially in the anniversary year, said Nathalie Singer, professor for experimental radio and vice-president of Bauhaus University. "In my group, for example, an audio walk is created in which media designers and people from the audio sector work together with monument conservators from architecture. The monument conservators generate the contents of '100 years of Bauhaus,' which are then implemented by the media people in the audio tour," she explained.
The interplay of art and technology
At the beginning of the 1920s, Bauhaus designers worked closely with industrial production. Bauhaus artists designed products with simple shapes that were easy to handle. Walter Gropius wanted art and technology to form a new unity.
Members of Bauhaus University now no longer design products for the industry, but they do pursue research about what new technologies mean for society.
Kicking off in October 2018, Bauhaus University in Weimar will offer a "Bauhaus semester" to mark the centennial. "In lecture series and colloquia, for example, we will consider which ideas from that founding period can be transferred to our digital age or how they can be applied to our questions about the relationship between man, nature and technology," said Singer. "For example, we are now facing the huge question of how digitization shapes design, but also how it affects society and social behavior."
Sustainability now also plays an important role among civil engineers and architects. Following World War I, the main aim of Bauhaus artists was to build inexpensive and practical buildings to make mobility and work easier for people. At that time, there was no talk of sustainability and energy efficiency. "These are issues that are more important today," said Singer. "Researchers will present their results to society. We have also applied for patents which will then be applied."
Pilgrimage site in Dessau
In 1925, the Bauhaus "madhatters" were forced to move from Weimar to Dessau due to the tense political situation. There, architect Walter Gropius designed a school building that continues to captivate with its fluid glass facade. Today, the world cultural heritage is considered an icon of modernity.
Turkish architecture doctoral student Eci Isbilen came from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in the United States to take part in an lab at the Bauhaus Academy in Dessau.
Today, the Bauhaus is a popular destination for architecture enthusiasts on a pilgrimage, she said — even if the construction no longer meets today's building regulations. "You have to experience this place for a longer period of time to be able to understand its advantages," Isbilen said. "The large windows suit this place," she noted. "You can open them on both sides. It is pleasant to work when it is hot outside, so the building is efficient in another sense as well."
Researching one's own space
The academy, which belongs to the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation, offers not only labs, but also one-year master's programs in cooperation with the Anhalt University of Applied Sciences and Humboldt University of Berlin. The Bauhaus school in Dessau was reopened in GDR times as a mixture of cultural and research institutions. The foundation, created in 1994, continues to promote this approach.
For a long time, there were still workshops at the Bauhaus in Dessau. Those involved also devoted time to social issues and integrated urban development projects into their work up through the 2000s.
Recently, this focus has shifted towards local curatorial work, explained Regina Bittner, director of the academy. "With the Bauhaus buildings and the new museum, which will open in the anniversary year, we are attempting to make references from the Bauhaus legacy to the present and to incorporate objects from our own collection into design science."
Globalization alters the view of Bauhaus history
Take a concrete object with a history of change, such as a Bauhaus designer's desk or chair. These objects would then be examined in the context of parallel developments. "To mark the anniversary, we want to take a different look at Bauhaus in the context of today's globalization. It's no longer about seeing the history of Bauhaus and its influences on the world," Bittner explained. Rather, Bauhaus is being explored today in the context of a cultural modernity in which there is a fruitful exchange between the regions of the world.
Bittner recalls a guest student from Colombia who studied the textiles of Bauhaus artist Anni Albers. "She linked this to the question to what extent today the new interest in the Andean handicraft tradition among young Colombian designers ties in with the dialogue Anni Albers had in the 1940s and 1950s. So what can one learn from Andean craft traditions in modern life?"
The fascination with Bauhaus
Eci Isbilen specializes in standardized building systems and mass production. She is writing her doctoral thesis on the architect Konrad Ludwig Wachsmann, who in the 1940s and 1950s, together with Walter Gropius, advanced the industrialization of construction in the United States.
Wachsmann developed a universal building system with industrially prefabricated components. Its construction was the subject of the LAB 2018 in Dessau. "It's worthwhile being here because Wachsmann can't just be seen as an American phenomenon," said Isbilen. "It's one of those stories that started here, crossed the Atlantic and then came back again. Changing places helps change perspectives."
The fact that the Bauhaus school's ideas and products are currently back in high demand is not only due to the centennial in 2019, said academy director Bittner. It is the realization that in a globalized world we have to deal differently with natural resources and can no longer continue to consume and produce as before. "Such a crisis already occurred in the 1920s," said Bittner. "At that time, the Bauhaus designers were looking for solutions on how to live in a present that was altered by industrialization and how to shape it in a humane way."
The optimism with which the Bauhaus pioneers attempted to shape their present in an agreeable way has become a model for us today, she added. That's why, Bittner said, people are looking back at Bauhaus with a fresh view.
10 essential facts about Bauhaus
Germany is launching the 100th anniversary of the influential school of design. Revisit the history and the ideas promoted by the Bauhaus.
Image: picture alliance/dpa/J. Wolf
It started as an actual school
In 1919, Walter Gropius became the director of a new institution, the Staatliches Bauhaus, also simply known as the Bauhaus, which merged the former Grand Ducal School of Arts and Crafts and the Weimar Academy of Fine Art. Even though Gropius was an architect and the term Bauhaus literally translates as "construction house," the school of design did not have an architecture department until 1927.
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo
It was against the arts' class snobbery
In a pamphlet for an April 1919 exhibition, Gropius stated that his goal was "to create a new guild of craftsmen, without the class distinctions which raise an arrogant barrier between craftsman and artist." Combining influences from modernism, the English Arts and Crafts movement, and Constructivism, Gropius promoted the idea that design was to serve the community.
Image: picture-alliance/akg-images
It proved that the functional needn't be boring
The most basic principle of the movement of the Bauhaus school was "form follows function." According to this idea, simple but elegant geometric shapes were designed based on the intended function or purpose of a building or an object. Illustrating this concept, the pieces of this chess game designed by Josef Hartwig (1923-24) are stylized to suggest how each of them moves and its rank of power.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/O.Berg
It promoted the idea of the 'total work of art'
The interdisciplinary approach of the school's professors and students meant that visual arts, graphic design, architecture as well as product and furniture design all came into conversation with how people lived in the modern world. They thereby actualized the concept of the "Gesamtkunstwerk," or complete work of art. This photo shows the interior of the Bauhaus school in Dessau.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
It included several influential artists
The school had many major artists among its teachers. This photo from 1926 features, from left to right, Josef Albers, Hinnerk Scheper, Georg Muche, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Herbert Bayer, Joost Schmidt, Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer, Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Lyonel Feininger, Gunta Stölzl and Oskar Schlemmer. Hannes Meyer and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe were also directors of the school.
Image: picture-alliance/akg-images
Bauhaus artists held legendary costume parties
Although the Bauhaus is associated with minimalist design, students and teachers invested an unsuspected amount of energy in creating surreal costumes for parties, as reported by Farkas Molnar in his 1925 essay, "Life at the Bauhaus." The parties began as improvised events but were later turned into large-scale productions, such as Oskar Schlemmer's "Triadic Ballet" from 1922 (photo).
Image: Getty Images/P. Macdiarmid
The institution closed several times
Political tensions led to different closures of the school. After being based in Weimar from 1919 to 1925, the Bauhaus moved to Dessau (picture). When the Nazis gained control of the city council there, the school closed again in 1932 and was reopened in Berlin. It was closed permanently in April 1933, pressured by the Nazi regime, which criticized the institution for producing "degenerate art."
Image: picture alliance/dpa/J. Wolf
Its ideals nevertheless spread worldwide
Even though the Bauhaus school was closed, different members of its staff kept spreading its idealistic concepts after they fled Germany. For example, many Jewish architects of the Bauhaus school contributed to the White City of Tel Aviv (picture), where a collection of 4,000 buildings were designed in the Bauhaus style. It is a UNESCO World Cultural Heritage site.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/P. Grimm
It still influences designers today
Though today people might most commonly associate modern, affordable, modular furniture with Ikea, the concept wasn't born in Sweden, but rather inspired by the classic works of Bauhaus designers. This photo shows tubular furniture designed by Marcel Breuer and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe from 1927 to 1930.
Image: picture-alliance/ dpa
Germany launches its 2019 Bauhaus centenary
The Bauhaus school turns 100 in 2019. Germany's major celebratory program involves not only the three museums housed in the former schools in Weimar, Dessau and Berlin (picture), but also at least 10 of the country's 16 federal states will participate. Expect several exhibitions, events, publications — and even new museums.