Keyvisual of exhibition 'The Whole World a Bauhaus'
Keyvisual of exhibition 'The Whole World a Bauhaus'; © Hit

The Whole World a Bauhaus

9 Oct 2020
 - 
22 Nov 2020
Museum of Architecture
Bernardyńska 5
50-156 Wrocław

Cały świat to Bauhaus

How did the Bauhaus manage to become such an innovative force in design and teaching, and in societies? The ifa exhibition 'The Whole World a Bauhaus' is devoted to this theme. Divided into eight different chapters, the exhibition focuses on an aspect of work and life at the Bauhaus between 1919 and 1933. The section on 'Floating' explores the Bauhaus interest in motifs of weightlessness and also looks at how glass and skeleton frameworks dematerialized architecture, or how the cantilever chair resting on air became symbolic of an entire design movement. The chapter on 'Experiment' presents objects that were the result of new research into materials and space, and whose dimensions, proportions, and testing of materials were also designed to make mass production possible. While the 'Total Work of Art' looks at the synthesis of all the arts, and also of art and science and of art and life, the chapter on 'Community' presents key objects documenting everyday life at the Bauhaus, including the famous parties. The chapter 'New Man' shows that the Bauhaus was not just based on utopian left-wing politics, but also explored other radical new political and philosophical identities. The chapter 'Art, Crafts, Technology' presents the Bauhaus workshops and the products they made, while 'Radical Pedagogy' looks at the organisation of the Bauhaus and its teaching practice. Crosscultural relations are explored in the chapter entitled 'Encounters'.

The exhibition title 'The Whole World a Bauhaus' goes back to a remark from 1928 of the Bauhaus student and later Bauhaus teacher Fritz Kuhr.

Curator Tour

Boris Friedewald

The Diversity of the Modern Era - ifa insights #2

Geometric abstraction was just as possible at the Bauhaus as organic shaping. In the pottery in Dornburg, the ceramics workshop of the early Bauhaus period, individual pieces were created. More classic vessels than avant-garde material studies. However, Theodor Bogler later created combination crockery that was serially assembled from individual pieces. 'The whole world a Bauhaus' shows previously unknown objects from the art school.

Photos: © GRASSI Museum für Angewandte Kunst, photo: Esther Hoyer; © Victoria Tomaschko; © Martin Müller, Berlin; © A. Körner, bildhübsche Fotografie

Dr. Valérie Hammerbacher

Charlottenplatz 17
D-70173 Stuttgart

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