Lyonel Feininger (born July 17, 1871, New York, New York, U.S.—died January 13, 1956, New York City) was an American artist whose paintings and teaching activities at the Bauhaus brought a new compositional discipline and lyrical use of colour into the predominantly Expressionistic art of Germany.
Feininger left the United States for Germany in 1887 to study music but decided to become an artist instead. He studied painting in Hamburg, Berlin, and Paris between 1887 and 1893 and then worked as a cartoonist for German humour magazines and the Chicago Sunday Tribune. About 1910, under the influence of the Cubists—especially Robert Delaunay—he began to receive critical attention and soon established his own style, utilizing prismatic interpenetrating planes of colour. This work, with its intersecting light rays, so impressed the artists of the avant-garde Blaue Reiter (“Blue Rider”) group that Feininger was invited to exhibit with them in Berlin in 1913.
After World War I Feininger joined the staff of the Bauhaus school in the printmaking workshop. The structural direction of his own work was closely akin to the aim of the Bauhaus: a synthesis of art, science, and technology. In 1937, after the Nazis came to power, Feininger returned to the United States, where he remained.
The Bauhaus was a school of design, architecture, and applied arts that existed in Germany from 1919 to 1933. Its full name was Staatliches Bauhaus.
What does “Bauhaus” mean?
“Bauhaus” literally translates to “house of building,” which was derived by inverting the German word Hausbau, or “building of a house.”
What kind of art did the Bauhaus create?
The Bauhaus aimed to merge art with technically expert craftsmanship through workshops that taught skills such as carpentry, pottery, wall painting, and stagecraft.
Who founded the Bauhaus?
The Bauhaus was founded by German-born architect and educator Walter Gropius.
How has the Bauhaus influenced modern art and design?
The Bauhaus inspired a focus on the functionality of objects for mass society as well as the fundamentals of design. Today many art curricula include foundational courses based on the Bauhaus model.
Bauhaus, school of design, architecture, and applied arts that existed in Germany from 1919 to 1933. It was based in Weimar until 1925, Dessau through 1932, and Berlin in its final months. The Bauhaus was founded by the architect Walter Gropius, who combined two schools, the Weimar Academy of Arts and the Weimar School of Arts and Crafts, into what he called the Bauhaus, or “house of building,” a name derived by inverting the German word Hausbau, “building of a house.” Gropius’s “house of building” included the teaching of various crafts, which he saw as allied to architecture, the matrix of the arts. By training students equally in art and in technically expert craftsmanship, the Bauhaus sought to end the schism between the two.
Beginning in the mid-19th century, reformers led by the English designer William Morris had sought to bridge the same division by emphasizing high-quality handicrafts in combination with design appropriate to its purpose. By the last decade of that century, these efforts had led to the Arts and Crafts movement. While extending the Arts and Crafts attentiveness to good design for every aspect of daily living, the forward-looking Bauhaus rejected the Arts and Crafts emphasis on individually executed luxury objects. Realizing that machine production had to be the precondition of design if that effort was to have any impact in the 20th century, Gropius directed the school’s design efforts toward mass manufacture. On the example of Gropius’s ideal, modern designers have since thought in terms of producing functional and aesthetically pleasing objects for mass society rather than individual items for a wealthy elite.
Before being admitted to the workshops, students at the Bauhaus were required to take a six-month preliminary course taught variously by Johannes Itten, Josef Albers, and László Moholy-Nagy. The workshops—carpentry, metal, pottery, stained glass, wall painting, weaving, graphics, typography, and stagecraft—were generally taught by two people: an artist (called the Form Master), who emphasized theory, and a craftsman, who emphasized techniques and technical processes. After three years of workshop instruction, the student received a journeyman’s diploma.
The Bauhaus included among its faculty several outstanding artists of the 20th century. In addition to the above-mentioned, some of its teachers were Paul Klee (stained glass and painting), Wassily Kandinsky (wall painting), Lyonel Feininger (graphic arts), Oskar Schlemmer (stagecraft and also sculpture), Marcel Breuer (interiors), Herbert Bayer (typography and advertising), Gerhard Marcks (pottery), and Georg Muche (weaving). A severe but elegant geometric style carried out with great economy of means has been considered characteristic of the Bauhaus, though in fact the works produced were richly diverse.
Although Bauhaus members had been involved in architectural work from 1919 (notably, the construction in Dessau of administrative, educational, and residential quarters designed by Gropius), the department of architecture, central to Gropius’s program in founding this unique school, was not established until 1927; Hannes Meyer, a Swiss architect, was appointed chairman. Upon Gropius’s resignation the following year, Meyer became director of the Bauhaus until 1930. He was asked to resign because of his left-wing political views, which brought him into conflict with Dessau authorities. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe became the new director until the Nazi regime forced the school to close in 1933.
The Bauhaus had far-reaching influence. Its workshop products were widely reproduced, and widespread acceptance of functional, unornamented designs for objects of daily use owes much to Bauhaus precept and example. Bauhaus teaching methods and ideals were transmitted throughout the world by faculty and students. Today, nearly every art curriculum includes foundation courses in which, on the Bauhaus model, students learn about the fundamental elements of design. Among the best known of Bauhaus-inspired educational efforts was the achievement of Moholy-Nagy, who founded the New Bauhaus (later renamed the Institute of Design) in Chicago in 1937, the same year in which Gropius was appointed chairman of the Harvard School of Architecture. A year later Mies moved to Chicago to head the department of architecture at the Illinois Institute of Technology (then known as the Armour Institute), and eventually he designed its new campus.
Anni Albers: wall hangingWall hanging, cotton and silk by Anni Albers, 1927 (woven in 1964); in the Museum of Modern Art, New York City.
The Bauhaus admitted women, who rarely had opportunities to pursue an art education in Germany outside of the home, but they were often relegated to what were considered feminine arts, including weaving and ceramics. Anni Albers (née Fleischmann; she married Josef in 1925, about two years after joining the Bauhaus) was assigned to the weaving workshop despite having previously studied painting with Martin Brandenburg. After her initial reluctance, Albers came to enjoy the challenges of the medium and experimented with weaving unusual substances. Painter Marianne Brandt eventually convinced Moholy-Nagy to allow her to join the metal workshop, becoming its first female student. She went on to design the iconic Kandem bedside table lamp (1928), one of the Bauhaus’s most commercially successful pieces. Other significant Bauhaus women include: Gertrud Arndt, Benita Koche-Otte, Gunta Stözl, and Lucia Moholy, who was László Moholy-Nagy’s wife from 1921 to 1934.
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