Bauhaus
Bauhaus
Bauhaus
thereby ending the era of one of the most important design schools in modern history.
Because of its progressive past, even the appointment as Director of the more politically-
acceptable Mies van der Rohe in 1930 had been unable to shield the school from the Nazi’s
growing political power (Droste 229–30). Yet, the Bauhaus’ opponents won well before they
shut down the school entirely, as Mies had already undone many of the school’s most
innovative changes.
Progressive education at the Bauhaus effectively ended when Mies’ predecessor, Hannes
Meyer, was ousted in August 1930 because of his Communist beliefs.1 From its founding in
1919 until that point, the Bauhaus was increasingly an institution that pioneered well-designed
products by and for the masses. And that, I believe, is the most interesting way to see the
school: not as an institution that established a specific formal style—in fact, the Bauhaus’ style
changed radically over the years from expressive and individualistic to rational and unified—
but as a school that advanced various populist and (utopian) universalist ideals, on which, pre
1 It could be argued that Meyer wasn’t very savvy about how to keep his job. He doesn’t seem to have done
much to hide his Communist sympathies, though they were obviously a political liability both from outside and
inside the Bauhaus (Droste 200). Nor did he try to discourage the students from making explicitly-political
work, as had Walter Gropius, the school’s founder and his predecessor as Director (Droste 49). He also doesn’t
seem to have been great at managing people. He repeatedly and publicly criticized how the Bauhaus had been
run under Gropius, turning him into a powerful enemy (Droste 200). And, Meyer presented his radical reforms
in such a way that Paul Klee and Josef Albers, long-time professors at the school, felt their positions were
threatened (Droste 200). Klee, Albers, and Gropius would all unite with the local mayor to fire Meyer.
part 1: Anyone can be a craftsman…sorta
In his founding Bauhaus manifesto, Walter Gropius asserted that the art schools of his day
were wrong to imply that an artist can be made when, in fact, art “in itself can not be
taught” (1; sec. Principles of the Bauhaus). Rather, he said, a person whom we think of as an
transcending the consciousness of his will, the grace of heaven [has caused] his work to
blossom into art” (1; sec. Introduction). Accordingly, Gropius argued that, almost always,
people who consciously attempt to make fine art will be “unproductive” and “condemned to
So Gropius championed a different aim of creative production, one that schools could teach to
and that everyone could participate in. That aim was to create a “complete building” (1; sec.
Introduction) in which artistic principles would be imbued harmoniously throughout (in the
“structure, finishing, ornamentation, and furnishing”2), rather than only in isolated works of
painting or sculpture that are tacked on incongruously. He stated it thusly: “The ultimate, if
distant, aim of the Bauhaus is the unified work of art—the great structure—in which there is
no distinction between monumental and decorative art.” (1; sec. Aims of the Bauhaus).3
In this model, craft skills become “the indispensable basis for all artistic production” (2; sec.
Principles of the Bauhaus); once the need to make every piece from an inspired concept is
Gropius argued, which excludes many people because making it can’t be learned and doesn’t
provide much income, craft skills are available to anyone (at least in theory) because they can
production as an artistically-minded
contribution to the built environment, he said, A work of art/craft integrated into the building.
even without divine gifts or inspiration, by Stained-glass window (destroyed) designed for
Dr. Otte’s House, 1921/1922
creating exquisitely-made and aesthetically- By Josef Albers
pleasing objects.4 Conversely, those who consider themselves fine artists but who are having
trouble finding work can apply their skills to the socially beneficial and economically sustaining
project of building (Droste 17, 19). And so it was the Bauhaus’ goal to educate all these
“architects, painters, and sculptors of all levels, according to their capabilities, to become
competent craftsmen or independent creative artists” (1; sec. Aims of the Bauhaus).
4 That’s not to say that Gropius hoped to produce students who would be uncreative or do work simply by rote.
His students would have everyday creativity—which he didn’t see as the same thing as the divine inspiration
required to make truly great art. They would design their own pieces and study with artists as well as craftsmen
(Droste 37). Further, Gropius claimed, learning craft would, in itself, develop creativity—he calls craft the
“prime source of creative imagination” (1; sec. Introduction). (He doesn’t explicitly say how craft develops
“Let us then create a new guild of craftsmen without the class
artist! Together let us desire, conceive, and create the new structure of
painting in one unity and which will one day rise toward heaven from
the hands of a million workers like the crystal symbol of a new faith.”
To this end, students at the Bauhaus received training in workshops that were led by two
Masters. One was a Master of Form, whose job was to teach the fundamental visual principles,
which Gropius believed underpinned and united all the arts and which, once learned, would
allow anyone to make beautiful objects. The other was Master of Craft, whose job it was to
teach the skill of the given workshop (e.g. woodworking, stonecutting, metalworking, etc).
The Bauhaus also argued that a creative potential exists in all students. As Lazlo Moholy-Nagy,
one of the school’s later leaders, put it: “Everyone is talented. Every healthy man has a deep
capacity for bringing to development the creative energies found in his nature.” (qtd. in
Borchardt-Hume “Two Bauhaus Histories” 70). In its early years, the school tried to cultivate
creativity, but the reasoning may be that the intimate familiarity with materials it promotes and the intense
practice it demands allow the artist–craftsman to see possibilities that those less attuned to the task at hand
would miss.) Finally, a number of students and masters at the Bauhaus continued to make fine art, including
Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky, who were both teaching free painting classes at the school in 1927 (Droste 188).
this potential by putting students more in touch with their subjective feelings, which were
considered, by influential master Johannes Itten (Droste 31) as well as by Gropius and others
(Droste 33), to be the source of creative production.7 But even when, in later years, the school
made a major shift away from individual expression, its next group of leaders continued this
notion of universal creative potential. (For them, however, the individual’s creativity was to be
than internal ones, which was consistent with the school’s increasing focus on mass production
But despite the recognition of universal creativity and the central placement of teachable craft
skills and visual principles, the Bauhaus was not as populist as it could have been.
Usually, this was due to financial constraints. For example, in October 1920, the Bauhaus
made passing its foundations course a prerequisite for workshop work (Droste 34), even though
this meant that, as Bauhaus master Oskar Schlemmer put it, “The Bauhaus automatically spat
out the untalented; they could stay no longer than half a year [the foundations course’s
length]” (qtd. in Droste 34). This unfortunate decision was financially necessary because, when
the cash-strapped school let its generally-inexperienced students into the workshops
immediately, it found that they used a huge amount of materials without producing work good
7 In order to put students in touch with their emotions, Itten started classes with gymnastics and meditation
exercises (Droste 25). He also tried to get students to “unlearn” ideas they’d received from their culture in order
to revert to a more child-like state that would supposedly free their internal creativity. This based on a notion
known as “child-as-artist”, which had recently become established among the educational reform crowd of
which Itten was a part (Miller 19) and which postulated that all children (and people from other “primitive”
cultures) had access to a more true and undiluted form of expression because their intuitions and emotional
reactions hadn’t yet been trapped or distorted by the intellectualizations of Western industrial culture.
enough to justify the costs. Later, Hannes Meyer tried to rectify the situation, saying: “The
Bauhaus...does not want to specialize in the talented...but simply wants to attract as many
people as possible, to then correctly integrate them into society” (qtd. in Droste 171). He briefly
expanded the school to less-talented students but quickly realized that the school didn’t have
the resources to support them, and he was forced to cap attendance at its prior level of 150
(Droste 171). Additionally, the Bauhaus’ stated aim of eventually having free tuition was also
Further, there was a non-financial respect in which the Bauhaus failed its populist promise to
its students: its sexism. Women at the Bauhaus did not have a fair opportunity, despite the legal
requirement that the school be co-ed; while the school initially attracted a roughly equal
number of women and men, Gropius and the other masters generally restricted women from
entering workshops other than weaving, bookbinding, and pottery (Droste 39–40). Although
the exact restrictions changed over the years, they survived in one form or another, and archi-
tecture, which became an increasingly important part of the school, was never open to women.
Nevertheless, the Bauhaus held a more-inclusive view of who was allowed to participate in
visual language. These masters claimed that each color, form, and compositional pattern had a
specific meaning that was universal and ahistorical, and this became one of the school’s key
universalist ideas.
The man most responsible for bringing this idea to the Bauhaus was Wassily Kandinsky, whose
1912 book Concerning the Spiritual in Art ascribed a different character to each color and
described how colors behaved in different forms (Droste 66). Once at the Bauhaus, Kandinsky
continued such work. He argued that the feelings produced by each visual are universal across
cultures and times because the visual world is felt instantly according to stable, biological,
culturally-specific agreement for the meaning of its words and ideas (Lupton 27). He tried to
“prove” this concept in 1923 by asking Bauhaus masters and students to take the elementary
shapes of circle, triangle, and square and assign each one a primary color (red, blue, yellow); a
large majority of chose the same associations— ▲ ◼ ● —though it must be noted that many of
Kandinsky’s ideas were also supported and expanded on at the Bauhaus by Johannes Itten and
Paul Klee (Miller 21; Droste 28). For example, Itten obsessed, much more than did Kandinsky,
over the effects of rhythms and contrasts (e.g. between colors, brightnesses, materials, and line
shapes) on a work’s emotional impact (Droste 19, 66; Bergdoll & Dickerman 17); and he tried
to determine these systematically by analyzing many classical works of art in order extract
partial success. The premise behind such a language—that visuals create universal, immediate
sensations in the viewer that are too automatic for culture or environment to influence—is not
entirely correct. For example, many color ‘meanings’ seem to be created by culture through
repeated association, like that between money and the color green. And while a Bauhaus
defender might argue that these meanings are superficial, less intense than ‘true meaning’, and
quick to fade when the cultural association is discontinued,8 a designer nevertheless needs to
account for them to communicate successfully to his audience. Further, scientific studies have
shown that environment can, in rare instances, affect vision at a much deeper level, down to
the very biological sensors present in an animal’s eye (Wurtz n. pag.). Yet there is something to
the Bauhaus’ theory: when MoMA reran Kandinsky’s questionnaire more than 80 years later,
the majority (albeit of visitors to MoMA’s site) still chose the Bauhaus’/Kandinsky’s preferred
about supposedly-objective visual laws, these were only seen as tools that might support the
artist in his subjective aims. As he put it (13): “As the tortoise draws its limbs into its shell at
need, so the artist reserves his scientific principles when working intuitively. But would it be
better for the tortoise to have no legs?” And so, although any given form had a universal
meaning, Itten’s students produced works that looked very different from one another, because
of the students’ differences in emotions and taste (Droste 27, 54). This was consistent with the
“[a]voidance of all rigidity; priority of creativity; freedom of individuality” (2; sec. Principles of
commercial commissions, which Itten saw as compromising individual expression (Droste 46).
And the school began to embrace mass production, while assimilating ideas from other avant-
The Bauhaus was drawn to mass production because it saw it as an equalizer that could make
good design (more) universally affordable through economies of scale; no longer would high-
quality products be reserved for the well-to-do.9 Walter Gropius, writing in 1923 to the master
of the newly-established production section of the pottery workshop, said: “Yesterday I had a
look at your many pots. Almost all them are unique, unrepeatable; it would be positively wrong
not to look for ways of making the hard work that has gone into them accessible to large
numbers of people...We must find ways of duplicating some of the articles with
machines.” (qtd. in Droste 70). This focus on making things for a broader public was another,
new kind of populism at the Bauhaus, and the school changed its products accordingly.
9 There were also a number of practical drivers. First, there were financial reasons to do it: the school, as
always, needed more more money and it wanted to break free of state subsidies; Gropius hoped that setting up
a company to sell mass-/serially-produced Bauhaus products, which he first investigated in 1922, would be
more profitable than taking one-off commissions, which simply weren’t coming in large numbers (Droste 58).
Second, the Bauhaus was hampered by its liberal image—despite Gropius’ continued insistence that the school
was apolitical (Droste 49)—in the increasingly-conservative political climate around it, and a shift away from
Expressionism, which was often associated with Communism (Miller 19) might have helped the school’s public
relations. Lyonel Feininger, put it like this: “One thing is sure — unless we can produce ‘results’ to show the
outside world and win over the ‘industrialists’, the future of the Bauhaus looks very bleak indeed. We now have
to aim at earnings – at sales and mass production!” (qtd. in Droste 60). In addition, Gropius still hoped his
students would make a valuable contribution to the built environment, but they simply didn’t have that
opportunity through the old-style craft work because such commissions were rare (Droste 58, 91).
It’s also worth noting that these more machine-oriented ideals weren’t totally new to Gropius; the building
that had first established him as a notable architect, after all, was the radically modernist Fagus Factory of
1911–1913 (Droste 14). Rather, he’d temporarily left some of these ideas behind in the economic depression
that followed right after WWI and was now coming back to them.
Gropius’ earliest experimentations with
pre-
fabrication started in 1922, when he and Adolf
Meyer began work on a system of standard
building pieces that could be produced on mass
and then combined, in an almost-infinite set of
ways, to make a house (Miller pp. 6). Gropius
described it as “an oversized set of toy building
blocks out of which, depending on the number
of inhabitants and their needs, different types of
machines for living can be assembled.” (qtd. in
Bergdoll and Christensen 56). Fred Forbát
developed a prototype of the system for the
Bauhaus’ pivotal 1923 exhibit, but government
opposition ensured it was never implemented.
In trying to make products that appealed to all, it adopted a new focus on functionalism.
Although Gropius had always wanted to make functional craft objects as part of his goal of
contributing to the built environment, the school’s approach now was more systematic. Its new
functionalism arose as it began to focus on ‘rational laws’, which it saw transcending cultural
boundaries and yielding the single, most-effective solution to a given “The engineer, inspired
by the law of economy
problem. Accordingly, this functionalism meant analyzing the nature and governed by
mathematical
of a problem to determine its functional requirements, and then calculation, puts us in
accord with universal
designing accordingly; art was completely denied as an explanation
law.”
for an object’s form (Droste 82–4). For the chair, for instance, Marcel
Le Corbusier, qtd. in
Breuer arrived at requirements that included: “angling of the seat so Mills 41
that the full length of the upper leg is supported without the pressure arising from a horizontal
seat” and “no heavy, expensive or dust-collecting cushioning” (qtd. in Droste 82). With this
shift in focus to the object’s function and away from the creator’s desires, the Bauhaus shifted
The school also strove to find the most economical way to address “Every object displays its
construction, no screw is
these functional requirements. Economy was a concern because concealed, no decor-
ative chasing hides the
wasting resources was seen as irrational, and it would make the raw material being
worked. It is very
design more costly and therefore less widely available. Moreover, the
tempting to see this
architectural honesty as
most economical solution was also that which didn’t add any forms
moral, too.”
—such as decoration—beyond what was necessary. Any
Rudolf Arnheim on the
nonessentials were irrational and therefore seen as arbitrary, Bauhaus’ visual language
in 1927, qtd. in Droste
culturally-defined forms that could further be dishonest and 122
oppressive. Reacting against the cheaply constructed but ornately decorated furniture that
mass production first made available to the poor, which imitated the furniture of the rich but
wasn’t actually as good, Bauhaus spokeswoman Sibyl Moholy-Nagy called for “a new code of
visual values [that will] spit in the face of the harmonious image which had hidden decay,
So when the Bauhaus shifted its visual language to fit its new products,10 it focused on the
The human character in some of the early works was replaced with precise geometric forms,
which were seen as more rational (in greater alignment with mathematical laws), more in
10 This shift wasn’t in conflict with the universal language the school had outlined previously. Rather, it began
to use the rational, essential, collectivist subset of that language.
keeping with the character of the machine (and it was assumed that
essential in that they got at the nature of the form most directly,
media, etc.
(triangle, circle, square) increased (Droste 58). These had always been
cannot even come into existence” (Kandinsky qtd. in Miller 4), but
now it was also assumed that their use across Bauhaus products
works that were universally acceptable (Droste 78). This change was
driven greatly by the influence of De Stijl and its founder Theo Van
with black, white, and grey) and straight lines with the explicit aim of
making art that would overcome subjectivity and the ‘the tyranny of
“Two Bauhaus Histories” 69; Droste 60). He took over the metal workshop and made it the first
It must be noted though that Stijl wasn’t the only avant-garde influence at the Bauhaus. In particular, Russian
Constructivist’s red, black, and white palette came through (109). Moholy Nagy (Itten’s replacement) was
friends with prominent Constructivist El Lissitzky and many other prominent avant-garde artists, and he was
familiar which much of their work (Borchardt-Hume “Two Bauhaus Histories” 68–70).
He and Josef Albers reorganized Itten’s Vorkurs
evolve standards for industrial production…” (Naylor 93) And, with that, the shift from
individual craft to collectivist, mass-produced design was truly complete, and the school would
functional objects. Take the pot at right, for By Karl Jucker and William Wagenfeld, 1923/4
Tea-essence pot
attempts by various Bauhaus contemporaries) also suffered this fate; the only thing universal
that came from them was universal agreement among modern typographers that the school’s
letterform modifications for the sake of geometry actually hurt their readability.
broader and/or more-neutral palette would have allowed the works to integrate in more contexts.
So, because it produced works that couldn’t, in the end, truly appeal to functionality as a
justification for their form, the school created the last thing it wanted: a ‘Bauhaus style’ that,
while relatively enduring, included arbitrary or culturally-produced formal qualities that were
not timeless and universal. As critic Wolfgang Pfleiderer remarked correctly on a Breuer chair:
“The Bauhaus chair is also an artistic creation, and the point is absolutely not because it can’t
look any different for technical reasons but because that’s how the artist wants it to look.” (qtd.
in Droste 84).
Finally, the Bauhaus’s focus on rational and universal laws even led it to determine its objects’
(asking, for example, “What is the nature of sitting?”), which ignored practical requirements of
But in 1928, when Meyer became director, he solved most of these lingering problems. When
he came to the Bauhaus, he would later write: “Incestuous theories blocked all access to
healthy, life-oriented design: the cube was trumps and its sides were yellow, red, blue, white,
grey, black” but “As head of the Bauhaus, I fought the Bauhaus style” (qtd. in Droste 199). And
and psychology (Droste 166, 170–72, 175). The De Stijl–influenced forms were out and truly
functional designs—designs that were actually ‘necessary, correct, and thus as neutral...as can
possibly be conceived’ (Meyer qtd. in Droste 196)—were created based on empirical research
into the users’ needs. It was under Meyer that, for example, Bauhaus chairs and tables were
178).
aggressively on the goal of meeting the “needs of the people” (Droste 171–72). He also cut
costs both to the Bauhaus and the public by using cheaper materials and more efficient
techniques, and by shrinking the school’s product line to further leverage economies of scale. It
was under Meyer that the Bauhaus sold its greatest quantity of products and became profitable
for the first time. And for a brief while, Meyer realized a successful, populist Bauhaus!
epilogue
And then things fell apart. Meyer was ousted for his political beliefs and Mies, his successor,
undid much of the school’s liberal work. He expelled the entire student body and refused to
readmit those sympathetic to Meyer. He banned all political activity by the students. He took
away their voice in the school’s government (Droste 204). He instituted a focus on costly
materials and expensive furnishings. He cut off all sales of Bauhaus goods to the public
(Droste 204). He raised tuition fees. And the Nazis, still perceiving the school to be a liberal
hotbed, shut it down anyway—first in Dessau in 1932 and then a year later in Berlin, where
Mies had moved the school. But maybe it was “good riddance” at that point, given how much
But as the Bauhaus died a painful death in Germany, its populist ideas continued to live on.
The school’s founders and representatives came to America and relentlessly promoted these
ideas (though as they were under Gropius, not Meyer) with huge success. And ten years after
the Bauhaus closed, a 17-year-old of German descent founded a company called IKEA.
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