aerodynamic
FOCKING HELL
+241|6194|Roma
I'm writing my senior essay on the Bauhaus movement and the changes it brought to the Art, Architecture and life style in general from the previous era of Art/Design in general. At first I thought i wanted to write about the changes it brought, but it seemed to me very unoriginal and people alreayd know.
Any ideas on a special and quite original thesis?

Last edited by aerodynamic (2009-02-01 13:48:06)

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DesertFox-
The very model of a modern major general
+796|7125|United States of America
Well, I know Chicago has architecture greatly influenced by Gropius and those folks. You could compare the styling of that city to one that mainly exhibits architecture from the preceding era, I guess.
aerodynamic
FOCKING HELL
+241|6194|Roma
Yeah, taht could work.
Will think about it and elaborate it.
Thanks.
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KuSTaV
noice
+947|6952|Gold Coast
Bauhaus kicks ass.

Their designs back then are modern by todays standards. Pretty imo.
noice                                                                                                        https://static.bf2s.com/files/user/26774/awsmsanta.png
aerodynamic
FOCKING HELL
+241|6194|Roma

KuSTaV wrote:

Bauhaus kicks ass.

Their designs back then are modern by todays standards. Pretty imo.
Well almost everything of nowadays are influenced by Bauhaus.
https://bf3s.com/sigs/8ea27f2d75b353b0a18b096ed75ec5e142da7cc2.png
i love the use of windows everywhere
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2a/Bauhaus-Dessau_Atelier.jpg/353px-Bauhaus-Dessau_Atelier.jpg


even the bauhaus font is stylin'
https://perpenduum.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/bauhaus_alphabet.jpg
rdx-fx
...
+955|7032
Prior to Bauhaus, the invention of the skyscraper necessitated sparse, light, unadorned steel-framed buildings.  The heavy, ornate craftsmanship of buildings previous to this, just wouldn't allow a building over 5 stories to be built.

The skyscraper made industrial buildings, well... industrial.  Spartan, sparse, plain, light, efficient.. boring, and boxy.
Bauhaus made it cool again.  Bauhaus showed how to take those spartan, sparse lines and make them artistic and appealing to the eye.
Before Bauhaus, "Industrial" style brought up the image of bland, gray Soviet Factory Worker - after Bauhaus, "Industrial" was cutting edge avant garde style.

You could also cite Frank Lloyd Wright as an intermediate synthesis between old-school heavy stone & craftsmanship - and the Bauhaus style.
Post WW-2 "Chicago Style" being the end-state evolution of Bauhaus style.

Bauhaus style did have a weakness, in that quite often it took the artsy stylistic design too far and compromised the actual usability of the items.  Too much curves and art, at the expense of the end-user utility.

On a positive note, Bauhaus discarded blind adherence to traditional materials - and truly embraced "use whatever materials and processes you can find from whatever industry is available".  Tube steel.. use it in chairs.  Geometric patterning.. use it in print & advertising posters.  Bash around, mix things up, make a mess - it may turn out interesting


Bauhaus = Art Deco + utilitarian Industrial design + human factors & ergonomics applied to buildings


If you want to be a smart-ass, you could use the old pre-goth band Bauhaus as backround music in a Powerpoint presentation.
Bela Lugosi's Dead, She's In Parties, In the Flat Field, and Swing the Heartache are a few of my favorites from them.

http://www.bauhaus.de/english/index.htm

Last edited by rdx-fx (2009-02-02 12:50:22)

aerodynamic
FOCKING HELL
+241|6194|Roma
Good one, sort of what i'm writing at the moment.
Will consider.
thanks.
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