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This lavishly illustrated volume, which comes in four different
colours and with an open Japanese binding, looks from both sides of
the Atlantic at 80 years of photography from Chicago. At the New
Bauhaus and what later became the Institute of Design, teachers
like Laszlo Moholy - Nagy, Gyoergy Kepes and spater Arthur Siegel,
Harry Callahan and Aaron Siskind taught an uninhibited approach to
the medium which influenced generations of photographers. To mark
the start of the great Bauhaus anniversary in 2019, the Bauhaus
Archiv / Museum fur Gestaltung Berlin is presenting its collecti on
of "New Bauhaus Photography" which is unique in Europe. It
introduces the protagonists and institutions who since the
foundation of the New Bauhaus in Chicago in 1937 have inspired,
created and collected photography and then presented it to the
public. The wide range of illustrations extends from abstract
photograms and material experiments to conceptual and process -
oriented works series. Contemporary works from Chicago complete the
picture and reflect the importance of the Bauhaus thought process
for th e present day.
In 1919, the state art school in Weimar was reopened under the
direction of Walter Gropius, with a radical teaching approach and
under the new name Bauhaus. Four years passed before the first
exhibition took place, which conveyed a new approach to art to the
enthusiastic public and carried the school's ideas all over the
world. The catalogue Staatliches Bauhaus in Weimar 1919-1923 was
published in 1923 to accompany this first public appearance. In
this interdisciplinary oeuvre catalogue, the idea and potential of
the Bauhaus found their way onto paper for the first time. In
addition to numerous project presentations, the theoretical
approaches of Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky, and Gertrud Grunow
convey the teaching methods of the various workshops. Gropius'
preface traces the structure of the State Bauhaus and presents the
unique reformation approach that demands and teaches the unity of
technology and art. The illustrations from the various workshops
also show projects by students whose connection to the Bauhaus is
less known. With the original layout by Laszlo Moholy-Nagy and the
cover designed by Herbert Bayer, the book is an important testimony
to that legendary avant-garde movement. This facsimile is
supplemented by a commentary that places this publication, rare and
long out of print, in a historical context and documents the
Bauhaus from its idea to its establishment as a renowned art and
design school. The German facsimile is accompanied by the first
full English translation of the catalogue, making it accessible to
an international audience.
Life in the digital economy of information and images enriches us
but often induces a sense of being overwhelmed. Sensing the Future:
Moholy-Nagy, Media and the Arts considers the impact of technology
by exploring ways it was addressed in the practice of the Hungarian
poly-math artist László Moholy-Nagy (1895–1946), a prominent
professor at the Bauhaus and a key figure in the history of
Modernism. Moholy-Nagy felt that people needed guidance to cope
with the onslaught of sensory input in an increasingly
technologized, mediatized, hyper-stimulating environment. His ideas
informed media theorists such as Walter Benjamin, John Cage,
Sigfried Giedion and Marshall McLuhan, who anticipated digital
culture as it emerged. Should we then regard Moholy-Nagy as a
pioneer of the digital? His aesthetic engagement with the
technology/body problematic broached the notions of immersion,
interactivity and bodily participation, innately offering a
critique of today’s disembodiment. Was he then both a pioneer and
a proto-critic of the digital? This book is intended to introduce
this seminal figure of post-medial practices to younger generations
and, by including responses to his work by contemporary artists, to
reflect on the ways in which his work is relevant to artistic
practice now. Having been highly praised by experts, this classic
receives a second and slightly revised edition.
Fagus is the story of a Gesamtkunstwerk and an early example of
corporate identity: the Fagus factory in Alfeld an der Leine, built
by Walter Gropius and Adolf Meyer from 1911, is regarded as the
founding structure of modernism. The architects succeeded in giving
a medium-sized company a completely unusual face that was anything
but traditional. This was possible because the client and architect
formed an extraordinarily favorable constellation. The factory
owner combined an affinity toward the life reform movement with
American corporate philosophy. With its representative objectivity
and extensive use of glass, the factory is also an expression of a
new entrepreneurial self-confidence and a modern advertising
strategy. The avant-garde further influenced the design of the
company's machines and its printed matter. The list of
collaborators reads like a Who's Who of international modernism:
some of Fagus's advertising, for instance, was designed by Johannes
Molzahn, Theo von Doesburg, and Herbert Bayer. And with his series
of photographs from 1928, the photographer Albert Renger-Patzsch
created what can today be called a classic image of the Fagus
factory and its products.
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