1 / 15

To what extend did Bauhaus influenced the 20th Century?

To what extend did Bauhaus influenced the 20th Century?. Bauhaus typography. Project 5: Style report by Ana Stear . 1. Context: the aftermath of World War I . A reaction against the class system and aristocracy

keziah
Download Presentation

To what extend did Bauhaus influenced the 20th Century?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. To what extend did Bauhaus influenced the 20th Century? Bauhaus typography • Project 5: Stylereport by Ana Stear

  2. 1. Context: the aftermath of World War I • A reaction against the class system and aristocracy • Architects were looking fora leading force behind the expectations to develop a “Brave New Word” Sinnde Photo Bauhaus Exhibition Barbican Center 2012 • A new way to integrate art, aesthetic & industry asa means of replacing the old approach in education & design. • New direction: ART TO INDUSTRY!

  3. II. Legacy principles: Muuz lamp Norman Copenhagen • Walter Gropiu’sphilosophy ”form follows function” transformed advertising, typography, architecture, people living’s spaces and public’s esthetic expectations in fundamental way • Information first, artistic flair after. Use your design to reinforce your message never the other way around Form follows Function Utility come first • Mission: to provide affordable artistic utilitarian design for every class of person - proved to be a success

  4. II. Legacy principles: Albers Stacking Stables Share & Collaborate Towards design enlightment • The school was founded on collaboration. It achieved an openness and collaborative style few groups had. • Gropius's vision towards a union of art and design - Proclamation of Bauhaus”(1919) - describes a utopian craft guild combining architecture, sculpture and painting into a single creative expression • Work with each other, share ideas, don’t live in fear of losing credit. Sometimes getting better and learning is more important

  5. II. Legacy principles: • Their crisp geometric style and in some cases primary colors are reflected in design everywhere. The purpose: to honor functionality with beauty and simplicity, to please the eye and capture the mind. • Kandinsky strove for a visual style beyond cultural differences. He believed certain colors complement each other and communicate specific ideas or emotions. Color & Shape There’s always a connection between • Bauhausdesign still feels incredibly fresh and current. Displaying the “perfection of geometry” is still highly sophisticated

  6. II. Legacy principles: Poster for Senator Obama in Berlin 2008 • For Bauhaus, words were a graphic element. Therefore they became a part of the architecture. • Like a chair in a room – functioning on their own as words, as artistic tools within the space. CleanTypographyMatters • Be as imaginative with your typography as you are with every other tool in your toolbox, but make sure it never detracts from your visual message

  7. III. Birthplace of a revolution: Bauhaus seal The Metal Party group photo – Oscar SchemlerTraadic Costumes 1926 Young people come to Bauhaus! T lux Feininger – Sport at Bauhaus 1927 • Teaching techniques and social principles aimed to foster: • Creativity / Happiness/ Friendship • Design education was seen as a means to create reaction against, rather than to follow. • Its spirit and ideas, the greatest legacy,were to influence many generations of architects designers and artists.

  8. IV. Gropius ‘s input: • Gropius decided that they should generate design for massproductionthat were simple, rational and accessible to everyone. • Their furniture - A new way of living- became a signature of their work more than architecture. Katz Bau Bookshelf M Breurer’sWassily B3 club chair with woman seated wearing Schemler Mask • The school’s philosophy: the artist should be trained to work with industry. Artists created prototypes for industrial production, as they saw the machine as a potential force for good both aesthetically and socially. Red/Blue armchair 424 G. Rietveld 1918

  9. IV. H. Meyer ‘s input: Marcel Breuer Armchair 1922 • He stressed on the social function of architecture and design. Favoured the public good rather than private luxury • The architectural focus shifted away from aesthetic to functionality Sinnde Photo Bauhaus Exhibition Barbican Center 2012 • His mission was to focus on the “needs of the people, not on the needs of luxury” Haus am Horn Kitchen(1923)

  10. IV. Mies van der Rohe ‘s input: • Author of Less is more philosophy - the perfect summary for modernism • Added an increased emphasis on architecture & building at Bauhaus school; moved it to Berlin in 1930; • He designed The German Pavilion atthe Barcelona Universal Exhibition Sinnde Photo Bauhaus Exhibition Barbican Center 2012 • Lily Reich controlled the interior design department • Became the most influential modernist architect of the 20th century and an inspiration for Ayn Rand‘s book ‘The Fountainhead’ Mies Van der Rohe Barcelona chair and otoman

  11. V. Architecture: Germany circa stamp showing Bauhaus architecture steel building Bauhaus Manifesto Quote The Bauhaus Building designed by Gropius in Dessau in an industrial aesthetic with concrete and steel and a curtain of glass is a component of what we now recognize as modern architecture ! • The Bauhaus paradox: it didn’t have an architecture department until 1927 • Other Bauhaus hallmarks of modernist architecture: • steel-frame construction • an asymmetrical pinwheel plan • maximum efficiency • spatial logic

  12. Unshakable place at the heart of Modernism Successive leadership Emblematic building VI. UNMATCHED IMPACT: • Bauhaus hadwhat no other art school had: • from three of the leading designers of the time Sinnde Photo Bauhaus Exhibition Barbican Center 2012 • that embodied the philosophy of it’s founder in an unmistakable image • the dominant movement of the 20 th century 01 International student body & supporters Celebrated faculty staff • treated as “Silver Princess” by a awestruck USA when they moved there en masse

  13. VII. Conclusion: What would have happend if a bomb would have denotated under this group photographed on the roof of the Dessau Bauhaus’ building in 1926? L-R: Josef Albers, Hi. Scheper, Georg Muche, L. Moholy-Nagy, Herbert Bayer, Joost Schmidt, Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer, V. Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Lyonel Feininger, Gunta Stölzl and Oskar Schlemmer • The course of visual culture of the 20th century would have looked totally different • Between them, they touched everything from photography and theatre to painting and architecture • The middle classes lived in tasteful simplicity ever after Typography with facial outline of its seal Bauhaus is everywhere!

  14. Herbert Bayers Universal Type THE END! Waiting for feedback and suggestions. Thank you

  15. List of cited works: 1. B is for Bauhaus, DeyanSujic, Penguin Books, London, 2014 2. Young people come to Bauhaus – article inspired from Barbican Center: Bauhaus Art is Life exhibition, 2013, http://sinnde.com/blog/young-people-come-to-bauhaus/ 3. Six Lessons from the Bauhaus: Masters of the Persuasive Graphic:http://blog.visual.ly/six-lessons-from-the-bauhaus-masters-of-the-persuasive-graphic by AnniMurray 4.Quick History: The Bauhaus & Its Influence: http://www.apartmenttherapy.com/post-241-93344 5. "The Bauhaus, 1919–1933". In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000– Griffith Winton, Alexandra, . http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/bauh/hd_bauh.htm (August 2007) 6. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bauhaus

More Related