bauhaus

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  • poopy

    I got a book on bauhaus for christmas & christ, it's inspirational!

    Not the usual photography stuff we all saw in lectures at college but there was some really exciting stuff going on.

    Only problem was, the chicago one never seemed to get away from the 30's stylie.

    Anyone else been surprisingly inspired? Forget the new media stuff, something real & tactile & full of real skill???

  • unknown0

    you blasphemed in the same sentence as 'christmas' - no more presents for you.

    love

    Satan Claus

  • unknown0

    Bauhaus the rock group were great, featuring Peter Murphy and the guys from Love and Rockets.

  • PuFFi0

    I got the the book about frutigers form experiments, really kool, He's the univers.

  • CX0

    What book is it?

  • PuFFi0

    forms and conterforms

    isbn 3-908257-02-6

  • DESILLUSION0

    bauhaus is the thing.

    i love how they thought about architecture, photography, and art as a whole.

  • unknown0

    what's the link for this?

  • DESILLUSION0

    no link dude.
    bauhaus was an art-movement that started in eastern germany in the 1920s, was later forbidden by the nazis and tried to reestablish then in chicago.

    you can get some info
    at www.bauhaus.de though

  • PuFFi0

    no, there is no link but that was the present I got and I just wanted to tell you. so.

  • poopy0

    It's amazing the way they learned about design & forms & stuff, so much more indepth than what we get these days.
    Not sure if that's a good thing or not! But it's all good.

    Anyone seen Warhol's fashion illustration of the 50's, didn't realise how influential it is today, with brands like benefit etc.

  • unknown0

    Bauhaus manifesto 1919 .
    The complete building is the final aim of the visual arts. Their noblest function was
    once the decoration of buildings.
    Today they exist in isolation, from which they all can be rescued only through the
    conscious, cooperative effort of all craftsmen. Architects, painters, and sculptors must
    recognize anew the composite character of a building as an entity. Only then will their work
    be imbued with the architectonic spirit that it lost when it became a "salon art." The old art
    schools were unable to achieve this unity and, after all, how could they, since art cannot be
    taught? They must be absorbed once more by the workshop.
    This world of designers and decorators, who only draw and paint, must finally
    become one of builders again. If the young person who feels within him the urge to create
    again, as in former times, begins his career by learning a handicraft, the unproductive artist
    will, in the future, no longer remain condemned to the creation of mediocre art, because his
    skill will redound the benefit of the handicrafts, in which he will be able to produce things of
    excellence.
    Architects, sculptors, painters, we must all turn to the crafts! Art is not a profession.
    There is no essential difference between the artist and the craftsman.
    The artist is an exalted craftsman. In rare moments of inspiration, moments beyond
    the control of his will, the grace of heaven may cause his work to blossom into art. But
    proficiency in his craft is essential to every artist. Therein lies a source of creative
    imagination.
    Let us create a new guild of craftsmen, without the class distinctions that raise an
    arrogant barrier between craftsman and artist. Together let us conceive and create the new
    building of the future, which will embrace architecture and sculpture and painting in one
    unity and which will rise one day toward heaven from the hands of a million workers, like
    the crystal symbol of a new faith.
    WALTER GROPIUS
    The National Bauhaus at Weimar grew out of the merger of the former Grandducal
    Saxonian School of Graphic Arts and the Grandducal Saxonian School of Arts and Crafts,
    with the addition of a new department for architecture.
    Objectives of the Bauhaus.
    The Bauhaus strives to reunite arts and crafts – sculpture, painting, applied art, and
    handicrafts – as the permanent elements of a new architecture.
    The ultimate, though distant aim of the Bauhaus is the Einheitskunstwerk (Uniform
    Work of Art) – the great construction that recognizes no boundaries between monumental
    and decorative art.
    The Bauhaus wants to educate architects, painters and sculptors of all sorts to
    become qualified craftsmen or independent creative artists. It also aspires to establish a
    study group of leading artists who will be able to design buildings in their entirety – from
    rough brickwork to completion, including embellishments and furnishings that reflect a
    similar spirit and unity.
    Principles of the Bauhaus.
    Art in itself is beyond all methods; it cannot be taught. However, one can teach a
    trade. Architects, painters, sculptors are artisans in the true sense of the word, therefore
    the thorough mechanical training of all such students in workshops is an indispensable
    foundation for all creative activities. (Their own workshops should be completed gradually,
    and apprenticeships should be entered into with outside workshops.) The school is the
    servant of the workshop.
    One day the two will merge into one. Therefore there are no teachers and pupils at
    the Bauhaus, but masters, journeymen, and apprentices.
    Teaching methods at the Bauhaus.
    The manner of teaching arises from the nature of the workshop: organic form
    developed from mechanical knowledge; elimination of all rigidity; emphasis on creativity;
    freedom of individuality, but strict scholarship.
    Masters and journeymen are examined according to the regulations of the guilds by
    masters of the Bauhaus or outside masters from the trade guilds. Students participate in
    the projects of the masters.
    There is common planning of extensive building projects – popular and cultural
    buildings – with utopian aims. Allmasters and students collaborate on these projects, aiming
    for eventual harmony of all elements and parts pertaining to the construction. There is
    continuous contact with the country's leading experts on trade and industry, as well as with
    the public, through exhibitions and other events.
    New experiments arecarried on to solve the problem of exhibiting two- and threedimensional
    art in an architectonic frame. Finally, friendly relations are fostered between
    masters and students outside of the work by means of theater parties, lectures, poetry
    readings, concerts, and fancy dress balls.
    Scope of instructions at the Bauhaus.
    Teaching at the Bauhaus embraces all practical and scientific fields of creative
    production: architecture, painting, sculpture, and related handicrafts.
    Students are taught a trade as well as drawing and painting, and also scientific
    theory.
    1. Workshops – be it Bauhaus workshops or others, where students are obligated by
    contracts – comprise:
    A. Sculptors, stonemasons, stucco workers, wood sculptors, potters, plasterers;
    B. Blacksmiths, locksmiths, founders;
    C. Carpenters;
    D. Scene painters, glass painters, mosaic workers, enamel workers;
    E. Etchers, wood engravers, lithographers, printers of fine art, engravers;
    F. Weavers. The foundation of the Bauhaus teaching is instruction in a trade. Each
    student has to learn a trade.
    2. Instructions in drawing and painting include:
    A. Free sketching from memory and imagination;
    B. Drawing and painting of heads, life models, and animals;
    C. Drawing and painting of landscapes, figures, plants, and stilI life;
    D. Compositions;
    E. Execution of mural paintings, plaques, and decorated chests;
    G. Lettering;
    H. Construction and projection drawing; Design of exteriors, gardens and interior
    architecture;
    J. Design of furniture and commodities.
    3. Instructions in the scientific and theoretical arts include:
    A. Art history – emphasizing not a history of styles but the understanding of historical
    working methods and techniques;
    B. Science of materials;
    C. Anatomy – with live models;
    D. Physical and chemical theory of colors;
    E. Scientific methods of painting;
    F. Fundamentals of bookkeeping, drawing-up of contracts, contracts for the building of
    houses;
    G. Single lectures on subjects of general interest in the fields of art and science. Workdistribution
    Plan
    The teaching is divided into three sections:
    (1) instruction for apprentices;
    (2) instruction for journeymen; and
    (3) instruction for junior masters.
    The details of education within the framework of the general program and the workdistribution
    plan, which has to be newly set up for each semester, are left to the judgement
    of the individual masters.
    In order to provide the students with the most multifaceted, extensive technical and
    artistic education, the work-distribution plan is so arranged that each prospective architect,
    painter, or sculptor may also participate in some of the other courses.
    Enrollment and Tuition. Space permitting, any person whose basic training is considered
    sufficient by the master counsel is admitted regardless of age or sex. The annual tuition fee
    is 180 marks (with the increased earnings of the Bauhaus, this should be gradually
    eliminated). In addition a single admission fee of twenty marks has to be paid.
    Foreigners pay double. Inquiries are to be made to the Secretariat of the National
    Bauhaus at Weimar.
    April 1919. The Administration of the National Bauhaus at Weimar.

  • poopy0

    rasko, couldn't you have done a short summary of that?

  • kendo0

    German propaganda!!

  • poopy0

    hmm as I seem to remenber it was the Nazis who forced it's closure. Not german enough!!!

  • unknown0

    "Forget the new media stuff, something real & tactile & full of real skill??? "

    Why, thank you!

    new media = no real skill.

    *ouch*

  • poopy0

    I'm sorry, that's not what I meant.
    I work in new media too & I feel like I'm losing my traditional skills as using a computer to draw etc becomes so much easier.
    & at the end of the day it's not real, if you catch my drift.
    I didn't mean it in a bad way it's just it's nice to see wher it all started.....

  • unknown0

    point taken.

    good thread!

  • Luckyitem0

    yep...

    picked up Harvard Design School's Guide To Shopping.

    Pretty nice book on the evolution of retail and how it affects/causes/history in architecture.

  • wadafa0

    Starting an art history class tomorrow...already took a little...Bahuas always seemed so depressingly german modern like...it's all about dada!