Exhibition tells the story of the weaving workshop in the Bauhaus
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, December 5, 2024


Exhibition tells the story of the weaving workshop in the Bauhaus
The exhibition Craft becomes Modern. The Bauhaus in the Making tells the story of the workshops from the perspective of craft in the original setting, the weaving workshop in the Bauhaus building in Dessau.



DESSAU.- Hammering, planing, sawing and weaving – it was pretty loud and dusty in the workshop wing of the School of Design, the Bauhaus Dessau. Although conceived as ‘laboratories for industry’, a great deal was still done by hand in the Dessau workshops.

The exhibition Craft becomes Modern. The Bauhaus in the Making tells the story of the workshops from the perspective of craft in the original setting, the weaving workshop in the Bauhaus building in Dessau. At the Bauhaus the relationships between art, applied art, industrial production and craft were discussed in more radical terms than elsewhere. And the backdrop to these domains, the economic and political situation in the Weimar Republic on which the school was dependent and in which it also aimed to actively intervene, had a far greater influence on the fate of this institution than any other.

The leitmotif for the exhibition, which is divided into five thematic sections, is the quest to redefine craft at the Bauhaus as utopian – as a critique of, but also in coexistence with, industrial culture. Ultimately, this was about finding creative ways forward in a social setting in which the distance between everyday things and their makers and users had grown. As controversial as the ideas and concepts of craft at the Bauhaus Dessau were, they shared a concern about mankind’s agency. A similar situation appears to prevail today: Embroidery, do-it-yourself and the digital crafts have ceased to be contradictory and now offer scenarios for human initiative in a world shaped by digitalisation, globalisation and technology.

Craft at a crossroads: The exhibition on craft at the Bauhaus thus begins with contemporary positions. Inquiring and conceptual designers such as Formafantasma, Álvaro Catalán de Ocón, Assemble, Sarah Ouhaddou, Dirk Vander Kooji, Natsai Audrey Chieza and Opendesk demonstrate with their experimental, activism-orientated, socially engaged projects aligned with vernacular tradition that craft is now a hybrid sphere in which the boundaries between design and manufacture, expert and amateur are dissolving and in which thinking and doing are being reconnected.

The exhibition goes on to shed light on the microcosm of historic practice in the wood, metal and weaving workshops. The subject area Unequal Partners: Masters of Works and Masters of Form provides insights into the various conflicts about the status of craft in the design of modern consumer goods at the Bauhaus Dessau. This involved the attribution of roles and the hierarchies in the everyday activities of the workshops as well as the self-images of artistic design. Thus the lamp designs of Alfred Schäfter, the metal workshop’s master of works, little noticed in the school and in the Bauhaus historiography, testify to the artistic talent of the craftsmen that were so pivotal to the activities of the workshops.

Anni Albers shared her fascination with indigenous pre-Columbian handwoven textiles with her colleagues: visits to the Ethnological Museum were, after all, part of the curriculum. Margaretha Reichardt, in her 1928 collage Sie brauchen das Bauhaus (You need the Bauhaus) expressed criticism of the mounting pressure on production, on “education for the production line” in the weaving workshop, allowing no time for experimental work. And Gunta Stölzl’s textile wall hanging 5 Chöre (5 Choirs), created on a Jacquard loom, is, with its ambiguous title – both a poetic metaphor and a technical term for a process on the power loom – a woven manifesto of a transition. In this sense the workshops in Dessau were places of transition between factory and workshop, between the training workshops of the schools of arts and crafts and laboratories for industrial prototypes, between experiment and Fordian piecework, between unique work of art and industrial mass product.

In the Machine Park machines and tools find a place in a Bauhaus exhibition for the very first time. These are essential to an understanding of craft; here, the cultural technologies and methods of working and forming materials are revealed. The Dessau workshops had a substantial machine pool compared with the more modest technical equipment of the Staatliches Bauhaus in Weimar. But although the metal workshop was re-equipped with new lathes and milling machines with assistance from the Junkers factory, vessels were still produced at the silver and coppersmiths’ workbenches. The (initially unused) machines in the metal workshop triggered a heated controversy which denounced as “amateurism” the backwardness of Bauhaus production compared with the achievements of industry. In the weaving workshop too, the coexistence of Jacquard and hand looms led to conflict about the identity of textile handicraft. Rationalisation and mechanisation in the textile industry served as a foil for a return to the hand loom, which the weavers perceived as a condition of a new access to industry.

Each floor of the workshop wing of the Bauhaus building had its own material store. These are addressed in the exhibition’s Material Store. Here, visitors will see objects from the lessons in materials that demonstrate the importance of materials science in the preliminary course and lesson notes from the workshops on materials science. Based on selected modern materials such as aluminium, cellophane and artificial silk they will gain insight into then already global flows of resources and materials behind the production economy of the Bauhaus.

The section Object Biographies sheds light on the consumer goods produced at the Bauhaus and their varied fortunes in the public domain. Their paths to development as prototype, bestseller, patent or personal heirloom tell us something about the institutional, cultural and economic contexts in which these objects were integrated and that defined their careers as products. The KANDEM lamp is one of the most prominent examples of a hand-made prototype that contains within it the complexity of industrial manufacture. But the Leipzig-based lighting company did not name the Bauhaus as the designer of the lamp. A successful progression from unique object to industrially produced, anonymous, mass-produced article? Conversely, the wrangling for patent registration exemplified by Otti Berger’s upholstery material expresses the move to reclaim authorship, the redefinition of the role of the artist or designer in an everyday world increasingly shaped by anonymous mass production. The still evolving career of Marcel Breuer’s Club Chair reflects the dynamics of branding in the consumerist society.

The exhibiion is on view at the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation through 7 January 2018.










Today's News

April 15, 2017

Exhibition tells the story of the weaving workshop in the Bauhaus

La Movida: A major new exhibition inspired by the cultural explosion of 1980s Madrid opens in Manchester

A selection of images by Larry Sultan, many never before exhibited, on view at Casemore Kirkeby

Joseph Bellows Gallery presents a key selection of Sage Sohier's black and white photographs

What if you could have conversations with an art piece?

Irish Museum of Modern Art opens a major international group exhibition

Carolee Schneemann Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement of the Biennale Arte 2017

Städel Museum offers free online course on Modern art

Writer Randy Kennedy joins Hauser & Wirth as Director of Special Projects

Whiff of history: Scientists sniff out the past

TEFAF New York Spring offers first look at debut fair focusing on modern and contemporary art & design

Swann Auction Galleries to offer two classic views by Piranesi at May auction

Exhibition at Ludwig Museum, Budapest features works by five artists of the Pécs Workshop

The Specialists of the South, Inc. to hold a major multi-estates auction with over 400 lots

Fate of the "Trinity Root" 9/11 memorial by Steve Tobin to be decided in Federal District Court

Heritage Auctions delivers world record prices at inaugural CCE World & Ancient Coins event

Exhibition of acrylic paintings by Sarah McEneaney opens at The Tibor de Nagy Gallery

MAXXI opens a major monographic exhibition dedicated to Piero Gilardi

Canadian artist duo Richard Ibghy & Marilou Lemmens exhibits at Jane Lombard Gallery

Photographer Micky Hoogendijk exhibits in the Netherlands

The Glasgow School of Art unveils designs for conversion of former Stow College building

Fridman Gallery opens first solo exhibition of British artist Navine G. Khan-Dossos

Fabio Torre's first solo exhibition in the United States opens at ClampArt




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful