The centenary of the Bauhaus School’s founding in 1919 has been marked by a wide range of international events and publications. Much attention has been paid to the artists who taught at the school during its fourteen-year tenure in Germany. But the Bauhaus itself—in many ways greater than the sum of its individual teachers and students—was not simply an attempt to redefine artistic practice, but was both rooted in and responding to European design reform movements instigated in the nineteenth century. As Walter Gropius stated in the first Bauhaus manifesto: “Let us then create a new guild of craftsmen without the class distinctions that raise an arrogant barrier between the craftsman and artist!”

This symposium engages with the history and legacy of the Bauhaus as a school of craft and design within the context of design reform during the modern period. How did the products designed at the Bauhaus relate to patterns of taste and consumption in Germany, and how did they perform in the marketplace? What vision of the built environment (what Gropius called “the great Gesamtkunstwerk”) did the Bauhäusler seek to fulfill—or to challenge? The Bauhaus was an extraordinary institution with far-reaching influence. Yet at the heart of its mission was the desire to engage with popular taste in architecture and design. We will consider the extent of its success.


Peter N. Miller
Bard Graduate Center
Welcome




Paul Stirton
Bard Graduate Center
Freyja Hartzell
Bard Graduate Center
Introduction



Freyja Hartzell
Bard Graduate Center
Art and Technology–A New Unity: Material Speculations at the Weimar Bauhaus



T’ai Smith
The University of British Columbia
Classroom Dynamics: Comparing the Activities of the Weaving Workshop and the Form Theory Courses



Elizabeth Otto
University at Buffalo, SUNY
Designing Women of the Bauhaus



Paul Stirton
Bard Graduate Center
Graphic Design at the Bauhaus



Karen Koehler
Amherst and Hampshire Colleges
“Historicism’s Bordello”: Walter Gropius Comes and Goes



Dara Kiese
Pratt Institute
Bauhaus Anti-Style: Hannes Meyer’s Human-Centered Approach



Jenni Sorkin
University of California, Santa Barbara
Weimar in the Woods: Marguerite Wildenhain’s Pond Farm



Barry Bergdoll
Columbia University
The Bauhaus’s Legend-Making Exhibitions Art and Technology–A New Unity: Material Speculations at the Weimar Bauhaus



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