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BAUHAUS


BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM
• The Bauhaus, an innovative German school of art and design was
  founded in 1919 by Walter Gropius, the school uses a foundations
  course and workshop experiences to train students in theory and
  form, materials, and methods of fabrication.
• Buildings are simple, functional, and industrial. Devoid of any
  applied ornament, they often appear asymmetrical and three
  dimensional, such that one must experience the building from all
  sides.
• The Bauhaus taught design in conjunction with modernism. In its
  Design, spaces took on a quality related to the abstract character
  of the current        painting and sculpture (Cubism and related
  movements).
• Ornament came          solely from the visual effects created by
  combinations of materials.
• The Goal was to unify art and technology, creating an aesthetic
  suited to the modern mechanistic world by relating materials, from,
  and function inSan O P O S T visual R N I S M - B A U H A U S
         B A U H A U T abstract M O D E vocabulary.
• Building Types: schools, offices,
  and government buildings.
• Architects orient buildings so that
  they receive the most sun exposure
  to take advantage of natural light.
• Structures sit on flat plains of grass.
• The most important construction
  materials include steel, glass, and
  reinforced concrete, sometimes a
  brick masonry applied on the face
  of the concrete.
• Exteriors are plain, simple, and
  unornamented.
• Windows were fixed in grid
  patterns.
        BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
BAUHAUS DESSAU




                                     Main Bauhaus school building




the sheer glass wall with no outer
support
       BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
• The basic structure of the Bauhaus consists of a clear and carefully
  thought-out system of connecting wings, which correspond to the
  internal operating system of the school.
• Gropius' extensive facilities for the Bauhaus at Dessau combine
  teaching, student and faculty members' housing, an auditorium, and
  office spaces.
• Instead of making the walls the element of support, as in a brick-
• The technical construction of
  built house, our new space-saving construction transfers the whole
  the building is demonstrated
  load of the structure to a steel or concrete framework.
  by the latest technological
  development of the time: a
  skeleton      of      reinforced
  concrete with brickwork,
  mushroom-shaped ceilings
  on the lower level, and roofs
               School and workshop are connected through a two-story bridge, which
  covered with asphalt tile that
               spans the approach road from Dessau
  can be walked upon.
         BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
HARVARD GRADUATE CENTER
• It was designed by The
  Architects’ Collaborative.
• The group of eight buildings
  arranged round small and
  large courtyards has a good
  community feel about it and is
  humanly scaled.
• The dormitory blocks are
  constructed in reinforced
  concrete with exterior walls of
  buff-colored       brick       or
  limestone and the community
  buildings are in steelwork.
• Block-mass             buildings
  connected       by      flat-roof     Exterior view of the Harvard
  canopies.                             Graduate center
• No exteriorU Sor O superficialD E R N I S M - B A U H A U S
        BAUHA       T POST MO
Exterior view of the Harvard
                                Graduate center




Exterior view of the Harvard
Graduate center - Dormitories
     BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
Masters’ House by Walter Gropius
BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
Tugendhat House by Mies
BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
FURNITURE                                    SYMBOLS & MOTIFS
• Unornamented         and      radically • There is no vocabulary for
  different, Bauhaus furnishings suit          motifs because buildings are
  Bauhaus concepts of the modern               generally unadorned.
  home.                                      • Some works include unique
• Designs        stress      simplicity,       architectural details that are
  functionality,               excellent       a part of the building
  construction,       and      hygienic        structure.
  industrial materials.
                                                D E C O R AT I V E A R T S
• Furniture is lightweight and space
  saving.                                     • After 1923, the metals
• Standardization of form and                   workshop produced many
  interchangeable parts are key                 ash trays, tea and coffee
  design considerations.                        services, kettles, dresser
• Furnishings are movable to                    sets, and pitchers in brass,
  support flexible arrangements.                bronze, and silver.
• Designs, of metal, are simple and           • Forms are simple and
  functionalH A U S T O PnoS T M O D E R N I S M - B A U H A U S no applied
         BAU      with     O     applied        geometric with
Wassily Chair
             by Marcel bruer


              MR Chair by Mies




                                 Desk by Marcel Bruer


BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
Marcel      Bruer
                              Nesting Tables




           Bauhaus Chair by
           Marcel Bruer
BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
Bauhaus Bed


                                            Bauhaus Bench


 Barcelona Table     Bauhaus Coffee Table


                    Bauhaus Sideboard

                   Bauhaus Table

BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
Cantilever Chair




                     Arm Chair by
                     Corbusier




Folding Table, by
Gustav
Hassenpflug
        BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
German(Barcelona) Pavilion statue



                                     Wall Hangings from Bauhaus

                                    Decorative        Arts,
                                    Metalwork by Brandt
       BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
WALTER GROPIUS



 BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM
• Walter Gropius was born in Berlin in 1883. The son of an architect,
  he studied at the Technical Universities in Munich and Berlin.
• He joined the office of Peter Behrens in 1910 and three years later
  established a practice with Adolph Meyer.
• Gropius is best known through the influence of the German Design
  school called the Bauhaus, established under Gropius’s direction at
  Weimar in 1919.
• After the closing of the Bauhaus in 1932, Gropius’s influence
  continued through his work in England and subsequently, in the
  United states, as well as through his leadership of the architectural
  department at Harvard university from 1937.
• Under Gropius’s direction, Harvard became the first American
  design school to accept the ideas of the modern movement.
• Gropius created innovative designs that borrowed materials and
  methods of construction from modern technology. This advocacy
  of industrialized building carried with it a belief in team work and an
  acceptanceU S standardization E R N I S M – W A LT E R G R O P I U S
      B A U H A of T O P O S T M O D and prefabrication.
• Bauhaus,        at
 M A J O R Germany,
  Dessau, W O R KS
  1919 to 1925.
• Gropius House,
  at        Lincoln,
  Massachusetts,
  1937.
• Harvard
  Graduate
  Center,         at
  Cambridge,
  Massachusetts,     Glass wall admits light into mudroom and entry hall,
 GROPIUS HOUSEyet protects privacy of main entrance.
  1950.
• Modest in scale, revolutionary in impact.
• Combined the traditional elements of New England architecture —
  wood, brick, and fieldstone — with innovative materials rarely
  used in domestic settings at that time — glass block, acoustical
  plaster, and chrome banisters, along with the latest technology in
  fixtures. H A U S T O P O S T M O D E R N I S M – W A LT E R G R O P I U S
      BAU
These eaves protect the southern-facing rear from excessive
sunlight. The openings between the eaves and wall promote
air circulation.




 Upstairs deck, outside Gropius' daughter's
 room.

       B A U H A U S T O P O S T M O D E R N I S M – W A LT E R G R O P I U S
Gropius designed
Cups
                             Gropius F51 Sofa
                                                            Gropius F51 Arm Chair




                               Newspaper shelf
                               by Gropius                 Gropius D51 Sofa
     B A U H A U S T O P O S T M O D E R N I S M – W A LT E R G R O P I U S

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Bauhaus

  • 2. • The Bauhaus, an innovative German school of art and design was founded in 1919 by Walter Gropius, the school uses a foundations course and workshop experiences to train students in theory and form, materials, and methods of fabrication. • Buildings are simple, functional, and industrial. Devoid of any applied ornament, they often appear asymmetrical and three dimensional, such that one must experience the building from all sides. • The Bauhaus taught design in conjunction with modernism. In its Design, spaces took on a quality related to the abstract character of the current painting and sculpture (Cubism and related movements). • Ornament came solely from the visual effects created by combinations of materials. • The Goal was to unify art and technology, creating an aesthetic suited to the modern mechanistic world by relating materials, from, and function inSan O P O S T visual R N I S M - B A U H A U S B A U H A U T abstract M O D E vocabulary.
  • 3. • Building Types: schools, offices, and government buildings. • Architects orient buildings so that they receive the most sun exposure to take advantage of natural light. • Structures sit on flat plains of grass. • The most important construction materials include steel, glass, and reinforced concrete, sometimes a brick masonry applied on the face of the concrete. • Exteriors are plain, simple, and unornamented. • Windows were fixed in grid patterns. BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
  • 4. BAUHAUS DESSAU Main Bauhaus school building the sheer glass wall with no outer support BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
  • 5. • The basic structure of the Bauhaus consists of a clear and carefully thought-out system of connecting wings, which correspond to the internal operating system of the school. • Gropius' extensive facilities for the Bauhaus at Dessau combine teaching, student and faculty members' housing, an auditorium, and office spaces. • Instead of making the walls the element of support, as in a brick- • The technical construction of built house, our new space-saving construction transfers the whole the building is demonstrated load of the structure to a steel or concrete framework. by the latest technological development of the time: a skeleton of reinforced concrete with brickwork, mushroom-shaped ceilings on the lower level, and roofs School and workshop are connected through a two-story bridge, which covered with asphalt tile that spans the approach road from Dessau can be walked upon. BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
  • 6. HARVARD GRADUATE CENTER • It was designed by The Architects’ Collaborative. • The group of eight buildings arranged round small and large courtyards has a good community feel about it and is humanly scaled. • The dormitory blocks are constructed in reinforced concrete with exterior walls of buff-colored brick or limestone and the community buildings are in steelwork. • Block-mass buildings connected by flat-roof Exterior view of the Harvard canopies. Graduate center • No exteriorU Sor O superficialD E R N I S M - B A U H A U S BAUHA T POST MO
  • 7. Exterior view of the Harvard Graduate center Exterior view of the Harvard Graduate center - Dormitories BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
  • 8. Masters’ House by Walter Gropius BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
  • 9. Tugendhat House by Mies BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
  • 10. FURNITURE SYMBOLS & MOTIFS • Unornamented and radically • There is no vocabulary for different, Bauhaus furnishings suit motifs because buildings are Bauhaus concepts of the modern generally unadorned. home. • Some works include unique • Designs stress simplicity, architectural details that are functionality, excellent a part of the building construction, and hygienic structure. industrial materials. D E C O R AT I V E A R T S • Furniture is lightweight and space saving. • After 1923, the metals • Standardization of form and workshop produced many interchangeable parts are key ash trays, tea and coffee design considerations. services, kettles, dresser • Furnishings are movable to sets, and pitchers in brass, support flexible arrangements. bronze, and silver. • Designs, of metal, are simple and • Forms are simple and functionalH A U S T O PnoS T M O D E R N I S M - B A U H A U S no applied BAU with O applied geometric with
  • 11. Wassily Chair by Marcel bruer MR Chair by Mies Desk by Marcel Bruer BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
  • 12. Marcel Bruer Nesting Tables Bauhaus Chair by Marcel Bruer BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
  • 13. Bauhaus Bed Bauhaus Bench Barcelona Table Bauhaus Coffee Table Bauhaus Sideboard Bauhaus Table BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
  • 14. Cantilever Chair Arm Chair by Corbusier Folding Table, by Gustav Hassenpflug BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
  • 15. German(Barcelona) Pavilion statue Wall Hangings from Bauhaus Decorative Arts, Metalwork by Brandt BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM - BAUHAUS
  • 16. WALTER GROPIUS BAUHAUS TO POST MODERNISM
  • 17. • Walter Gropius was born in Berlin in 1883. The son of an architect, he studied at the Technical Universities in Munich and Berlin. • He joined the office of Peter Behrens in 1910 and three years later established a practice with Adolph Meyer. • Gropius is best known through the influence of the German Design school called the Bauhaus, established under Gropius’s direction at Weimar in 1919. • After the closing of the Bauhaus in 1932, Gropius’s influence continued through his work in England and subsequently, in the United states, as well as through his leadership of the architectural department at Harvard university from 1937. • Under Gropius’s direction, Harvard became the first American design school to accept the ideas of the modern movement. • Gropius created innovative designs that borrowed materials and methods of construction from modern technology. This advocacy of industrialized building carried with it a belief in team work and an acceptanceU S standardization E R N I S M – W A LT E R G R O P I U S B A U H A of T O P O S T M O D and prefabrication.
  • 18. • Bauhaus, at M A J O R Germany, Dessau, W O R KS 1919 to 1925. • Gropius House, at Lincoln, Massachusetts, 1937. • Harvard Graduate Center, at Cambridge, Massachusetts, Glass wall admits light into mudroom and entry hall, GROPIUS HOUSEyet protects privacy of main entrance. 1950. • Modest in scale, revolutionary in impact. • Combined the traditional elements of New England architecture — wood, brick, and fieldstone — with innovative materials rarely used in domestic settings at that time — glass block, acoustical plaster, and chrome banisters, along with the latest technology in fixtures. H A U S T O P O S T M O D E R N I S M – W A LT E R G R O P I U S BAU
  • 19. These eaves protect the southern-facing rear from excessive sunlight. The openings between the eaves and wall promote air circulation. Upstairs deck, outside Gropius' daughter's room. B A U H A U S T O P O S T M O D E R N I S M – W A LT E R G R O P I U S
  • 20. Gropius designed Cups Gropius F51 Sofa Gropius F51 Arm Chair Newspaper shelf by Gropius Gropius D51 Sofa B A U H A U S T O P O S T M O D E R N I S M – W A LT E R G R O P I U S