Art
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The Endless Influence of The Bauhaus Movement
Here in Berlin, Germany’s Bauhaus Archiv is throwing a farewell party. Next year this museum will close for renovation, and until then it’s presenting a display of ‘greatest hits’ from the world’s biggest Bauhaus collection. From furniture and posters to crockery and cutlery, these exquisite objects show how the Bauhaus school shaped our idea of good design.
For most of us, the word Bauhaus conjures up a certain type of modern architecture – that stark aesthetic that spawned a million tower blocks. But the Bauhaus was much more than an architectural style – it was a new way of thinking, and a century since it was born, at the end of World War One, its ideas still set the pattern for the way we live today.
The Bauhaus was founded in 1919 in the German city of Weimar, by a Prussian architect called Walter Gropius. No architecture was taught here. It was a sort of art school, but one like no other. Instead of drawing nudes and still lives, students here were taught to look at the world around them in an entirely different way.
There is no essential difference between the artist and the craftsman – Walter Gropius
Bauhaus means ‘building house’ but Gropius didn’t want to build only houses. He wanted to create a new breed of artists, who could turn their hands to anything. Traditional art schools were conservative and elitist. Technical colleges were dreary and conventional. Gropius broke down the barrier between fine art and applied arts.
“There is no essential difference between the artist and the craftsman,” he said. Pupils learned pottery, printmaking, book-binding, and carpentry. They studied typography and advertising. They went back to basics, and began again with fresh eyes.
“An object is defined by its nature,” announced Gropius. “In order to design it to function properly, one must first of all study its nature. For it to serve its purpose perfectly, it must fulfil its function in a practical way.” Instead of sitting in stuffy classrooms listening to lectures, students were assigned to workshops. They learned on the job.
Nature of objects
The results were extraordinary. The Bauhaus produced an incredible array of artifacts, from angle poise lamps to chess sets, all distinguished by their functional and elegant construction. They were simple and useful, and their simplicity made them beautiful. In an era of ornamentation, their streamlined appearance was revolutionary. This was a new age of design.
“Bauhaus workshops are laboratories in which prototypes of products suitable for mass production are carefully developed and continually improved,” declared Gropius. “In these laboratories, the Bauhaus will train and educate a new type of worker for craft and industry, who has an equal command of both technology and form.”
An object is defined by its nature – Walter Gropius
Not everyone shared his vision. In local elections in 1924, the liberals who had supported the Bauhaus were defeated, and the new conservative government cut off the school’s funding. On 1 April 1925, exactly six years after it opened, the Bauhaus was forced to close.
Yet by now, the word about the Bauhaus had spread way beyond Weimar, and another German city, Dessau, gave it a new home. The local government commissioned a spectacular new building, designed by Gropius. It was here that the Bauhaus came of age.
A new home
In Dessau, Gropius started teaching architecture, but he added other genres too. There were workshops devoted to weaving, metalwork, photography and stage design. Gropius left in 1928 to resume his career as an architect, but under a new director, Hannes Meyer, the school went from strength to strength. Bauhaus wallpaper became the school’s bestselling product. At last, there was an art school which could actually pay its way.
But German politics was polarizing, and support for the Nazis was growing. In 1930 Dessau’s city council dismissed Meyer on account of his “communist tendencies,” and in 1931 the Nazis won the local elections, having promised to close the Bauhaus (they called it “cultural bolshevism”). Thankfully Gropius’s building survived and still stands there today, but the students and teachers were forced to flee. They found a new home in an old factory in Berlin, under their new director, the brilliant architect Mies van der Rohe, but in 1933 Hitler came to power and shut the Bauhaus down.
A modern threat
Why did the Nazis feel so threatened by the Bauhaus? Why were they so scared of an art school that made modernist furniture and kitchenware? Because it represented a worldview which was the complete opposite of National Socialism.
Nazism was nostalgic and nationalistic. The Bauhaus was cosmopolitan and avant-garde. Its international ethos made a mockery of Hitler’s racist fantasies. In a way, the persecution of the Bauhaus by the Nazis was a (very) backhanded compliment. They hated everything it stood for, but they were fearful of its power.
Ironically, it was this persecution of the Bauhaus which ensured its survival. Had it been embraced by the Third Reich, it would have perished with it. Driven into exile, its philosophy spread around the globe. Gropius and Mies van der Rohe went to America, where they were joined by Bauhaus teachers such as Josef Albers, Herbert Bayer, Walter Peterhaus and Laszlo Moholy-Nagy. In 1937, Moholy-Nagy founded the ‘New Bauhaus’ in Chicago. In 1938, New York’s Museum of Modern Art staged a blockbuster Bauhaus exhibition. Bauhaus style was here to stay.
The true measure of its immense influence is how familiar it has become
But what exactly is Bauhaus style? Like all design classics, you know it when you see it, but Mies van der Rohe’s motto, ‘Less is More,’ is a good place to start (‘chuck out the chintz’ is just as good). Form follows function. Each element is stripped down to its bare essentials. Everything is fit for purpose. The result is austere, but strangely pleasing on the eye.
Yet the true measure of its immense influence is how familiar it has become. Wandering around the Bauhaus Archiv (a futuristic building designed by Gropius, and eventually built after his death) the exhibits here seem so contemporary. It’s only when you read the labels that you realise they are nearly a hundred years old. Once a radical revolt against the status quo, Bauhaus style has become the new normal. And by becoming ubiquitous, it has disappeared – into the décor of our daily lives.
Bauhaus in Motion is at the Bauhaus Archiv, Berlin until 8 January 2018. New Bauhaus Chicago: Experiment Photography is at the Bauhaus Archiv from 15 November 2017 to 5 March 2018.
This article was written by William Cook. It originally appeared on www.bbc.com. All rights reserved.
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Designer’s Top Picks from The Salon Art + Design
Luxury pillow designer Cynthia Murphy’s Top Picks from the opening night preview of the annual Salon Art + Design where she enjoyed an amazing display of the crème de la crème furniture and fine arts from well over 50 galleries that hailed from 11 countries. Above is a sneak peek of some of her top picks from the much talked about furniture fair from the beautiful Park Avenue Armory.
Fun Facts About The Designer: Cynthia Murphy’s eye for beauty, and her appreciation for how different cultures develop their stylistic approach and techniques, has driven her to collect textiles on a global basis. Within each piece, she recognizes social influences— fashion, ritual, symbolism, status, honor— that go beyond aesthetics and deepen the cultural connection. This extra dimension beyond beauty fuels Cynthia’s true passion for collecting. She first selected rich, intricate, 18th and 19th-century embroideries and brocades from France, England, and Italy. Then, as her curiosity was piqued, she added Asian needlework, Turkish weaving, and Persian silks. Cynthia’s special interest in Art Deco and Arts & Crafts design expanded the scope of her collection.
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The Other Art Fair Opens This Week at the Brooklyn Expo Center
Notable Art Show of The Week
This week The Other Art Fair will return to the Brooklyn Expo Center in Greenpoint from November 9 – 12, 2017 for its second U.S. fair. This notable show is different in that it lets the creator/artists take charge, by selling directly to the public without the barrier of a dealer or gallery. While New York City plays host to multiple art fairs like Frieze and TEFAF, geared to wealthy art collectors, the Other Art Fair is unique in that it offers access to tomorrow’s next art star at accessible prices starting at under $1000! A selection of local artists of note includes Ilisa Katz Rissman, Gaius Cruz, Evan Paul English, Thomas Hammer and Karen Inglehart to name a few.The Other Art Fair is presented by Saatchi Art and is the U.K.’s leading art fair for discovering emerging artists.Fun Facts about the fair:
Over 130 international, local and female artists will be showcasing their art. The Fair features over 130 international, local and female artists whose work will appeal to both eagle-eyed collectors and a new generation of art lovers.
Dates and Times
Opening Night $30 (benefits Free Arts NYC)Thursday, November 9th, 6:00pm-10:00pmGeneral Entry $15 ($13.50 Students and Seniors)Friday, November 10th, 12:00pm–9:00pmSaturday, November 11th, 11:00am–7:00pmSunday, November 12th, 11:00am–6:00pmLocation
72 Noble Street, BrooklynAccessible by the G Train Greenpoint Avenue Stop. The East River Ferry India Street stop. -
ApArt Makes its New York Debut On The Upper East Side
ApArt – The story of how a private gallery made its public début in New York City
High End Weekly™: Tell us about ApART, your background in art and how it led you to launch apART?
Thais Marin, Co-Founder of apArt: The gallery started because my husband is an artist and creative from the advertising industry (Leo Macias, CCO of DDB Colombia) and I felt that is was necessary to have a space to share and showcase his artwork. One day we decided to buy a bigger apartment that would allow us to build an art studio inside the apartment. One day, as we were traveling to Berlin, we discovered Christian Boros and the way he would let people into his own home to view his art pieces. This brought us insight. We decided not only to have an art studio but instead build an art gallery inside our apartment and have people come into the apartment to see the art exhibitions. The successes then came when people discovered the art displayed in an art gallery inside of a private residence!
I grew up watching my mom paint and that inspired me with creativity. Plus, I always would decide to draw instead of watching TV with my brothers. That led me to a career in the advertising industry where I could use my creativity. I was once an account and interactivity professional in the advertising and marketing industry and handled several brands such as Disney. McDonald’s, Coca-Cola, Unilever, Avon, Embraer, Carregour, Extra, iG Internet, Bradesco Bank, among others on a global, regional and local level. I also worked on strategic campaigns involving global licensing with DreamWorks, Turner, Nickelodeon, Fox, Viz, Imagius, Televisa, Paramount, Mattel, Wild Planet, 4kids, LucasFilm, Marvel, Sanrio, Lego, Hasbro, DicComics, and WarnerBros. Recently, I’ve worked for The Walt Disney Company as a Sales Promotional manager where I improved my experience in marketing.
Being a multitasking, avant-garde professional, I wanted to go beyond creativity. So, I developed a creative art concept based on developing new artists, especially from the advertising industry. I built the first art gallery in a private apartment in Brazil, that is now is taking place in other cities such as New York and Bogota. Through this creative economy concept, I can be in closer contact with creative professionals, whom I believe may be able to inspire me in some type of way. Creative writing is another one of my passions, and I had published two young adult fiction books from a trilogy called “Wild Horses”, which have already been distributed in Brazil and Portugal.
High End Weekly™: What makes your gallery unique? Tell us about your first show here in New York City.
ApArt: Besides being an art gallery built inside of a private apartment, another differentiation of apart is the artists. We celebrate artists! We present them to the world of art. We assist them until they are prepared to be a real artist. They feel so overwhelmed with gratitude to have this opportunity that they never imagined they would have. We prepare them for the conventional galleries. We believe the reason apArt is so sought after is that we’re doing business with generosity, we’re giving people a way to see art and experience it in an unconventional way. We’re giving them the opportunity to buy their first piece and to the artist the opportunity to sell their first art piece.
Another service that we brought to Brazil that turned out to be a huge success was the art rental. People become very curious about it, and to our own surprise, we’re the first gallery to bring it to Brazil. We plan on growing the art rental in New York as well.
The big challenges are to turn new buyers into future collectors and to make time for all the artists that deserve to have their work exposed. We believe the reason apArt is thriving is that we’re doing business with generosity. We’re giving people a way to see art and experience it in an unconventional way. We’re giving them an opportunity to buy their first piece and giving the artist the opportunity for them to sell their first piece.
High End Weekly™: Why New York?
ApArt: New York is a place where people really watch what is going on. We believe that by investing in New York we can help show people the message of art. Because apArt’s concept is to provide opportunities to new artists, specifically from the advertising market, we decided to have it here because it’s one of the most important areas for the advertising market. Also, New York is a great place for opportunities in the art industry!
High End Weekly™: What is the first artwork/artist that captured your attention?
ApArt: I use Instagram, and I believe it is a great tool to see art, to see great photos. I follow Marcello Serpa on Instagram and was surprised to find out that he’s an artist. I watched him my whole career and never realized that. His art has a presence and a great mix of colors that are very ludic. People look for this kind of art. Art that takes them to another world, another fantasy world. Marcello’s art is also very family friendly. We sold almost every piece and pretty much all the buyers have a family and children.
High End Weekly™: What type of art does ApART focus on? And what do you look for in an artist?
ApArt: Our main goal is to be recognized as the type of art gallery that prepares artists for the conventional galleries and builds more collectors. We look for art that represents the beauty, the beauty inside and out, and that really shows the artist’s soul. The artist should be a beginner in the art world but should have a passion to create inside and out.
High End Weekly™: When did you realize that the business of art was something you wanted to be the cornerstone of your life?
ApArt: Diane von Furstenberg once said, “Generosity is the best business if you do it, they all come back to you.” Everything that I heard that day from her was fitting to me and the path that I was on to develop apArt. All the work we do stand for the artists. To help them begin their career and aid them from start to finish, and then we let them free. Free to start their own path, but we never abandoned them. We follow them and keep selling their art as much as we can. We become fans.
High End Weekly™: Do you believe that smaller galleries can innovate in order to survive the age of “Mega-Gallery?”
ApArt: Yes, I do believe that. There are so many ways, one of them would be building new collectors. There is so much to be done.
High End Weekly™: When is your next show here in New York, and what do we have to look forward to?
ApArt: Our next show will be a Japanese one. We are looking to find artists that have an eye for Japanese art.
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Bunny Mellon at The National Gallery of Art
Are you in DC this weekend, and happen to be a huge fan of Bunny Mellon, like we all are here at High End Weekly? Then we strongly urge you to head over to the East Building Auditorium of the National Gallery of Art.
Here are some tidbits of the upcoming book signing – as per the museum’s website.
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Bunny Mellon: The Pursuit of Perfection
- October 15 at 2:00 pm.
East Building Auditorium - Meryl Gordon, director of magazine writing, Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute, New York University, and author of The Phantom of Fifth Avenue: The Mysterious Life and Scandalous Death of Heiress Huguette Clark (2014) and Mrs. Astor Regrets: The Hidden Betrayals of a Family Beyond Reproach (2008)
Rachel Lowe Lambert Lloyd Mellon (1910–2014), also known as Bunny Mellon, was an American gardener, horticulturalist, philanthropist, and art collector. She represented the epitome of American aristocratic self-taught taste. With an unerring eye and an unlimited budget, she brought a modern sensibility to the extraordinary art collection that she and her husband Paul Mellon amassed, which included many works now in the collection of the National Gallery of Art. Acclaimed for designing the White House Rose Garden for her friend John F. Kennedy and famed as a garden designer and fashion trendsetter, Mellon was press-shy during her lifetime. To write Bunny Mellon: The Life of an American Style Legend, the first biography of this influential woman, author Meryl Gordon drew on Mellon’s journals and letters and interviewed more than 175 people. In this lecture, Gordon discusses the interplay between the public and the private Bunny Mellon, as well as her close friendship with Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.
A book signing of Bunny Mellon: The Life of an American Style Legend follows.
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Exploring Louise Bourgeois’ Creative Side
The last few weeks of summer is dwindling away. And even though we still have our eyes on chic summer travels, and rooftop parties, we’re also putting together an amazing list of this fall’s top museum exhibitions. The first one that came to mind is Louise Bourgeois: An Unfolding Portrait at MOMA. The show explores the prints, books, and creative process of the celebrated sculptor Louise Bourgeois (1911–2010).
Bourgeois’s printed oeuvre, a little-known aspect of her work, is vast in scope and comprises some 1,400 printed compositions, created primarily in the last two decades of her life but also at the beginning of her career, in the 1940s. The Museum of Modern Art has a prized archive of this material, and the exhibition will highlight works from the collection along with rarely seen loans. A special installation will fill the Museum’s Marron Atrium from September 24, 2017, until January 28, 2018.
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The Most Romantic Small Towns in Europe
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Throwback To Bridgehampton, Spring 2017
Images courtesy of Richard Lewin.
Back in the spring of 2017, we took a memorable artsy trip to The Hamptons, and explored The South Hampton Art Museum, took a private tour of the Dan Flavin Museum, and visited the artist studios of Toni Ross, and Bastienne Schmidt. And let’s not forget the fabulous lunch we all enjoyed at Toni Ross lovely home.
At the South Hampton Art Museums, we were given a thorough tour which highlighted the works of Philippe Cheng, Louise Eastman with Janis Stemmermann, Christopher French, Saskia Friedrich, Mary Heilmann, Toni Ross, Bastienne Schmidt, Michelle Stuart, Edwina von Gal and the Perfect Earth Project, and Almond Zigmund. Some of the exhibitions may still be there for the summer. Have a look at the museum’s schedule by visiting their website.
Are you visiting The Hamptons this summer? Then we highly recommend that you tour Dan Flavin Art Institute where we were all in awe of the permanent installation of Flavin’s plus a special exhibition, Icons. Bridging the mediums of painting and sculpture, Dan Flavin completed a series of eight works known as “Icons” between 1961 and 1964. They connect the work that he made early in his career to the sculptures in light for which he is remembered for. The Icons exhibition illustrates the leap that he made from painting to working in pure light.
Photos by High End Weekly. All Rights Reserve.
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Public, “The People’s Hotel” Opens its doors in The Lower East Side
Luxury for the masses. That’s what PUBLIC (with its $150 per night entry price point on rooms) the new hotel by the man who pioneered the boutique hotel concept, Ian Schragger plans to bring to the trendy lower east side on June 7, 2017. PUBLIC was designed by award-winning architects Herzog & de Meuron, and it boasts a restaurant and grab-and-go marketplace helmed by Jean-Georges Vongerichten. Guests will no doubt enjoy their experiences in the “LUXURY FOR ALL” hotel the moment they arrive in the lobby which serves as a “community” space, encouraging work and social activities, a modular, multimedia venue that can serve as a nightclub, art gallery, cultural center, performance space, screening room or intimate concert venue, a nightclub and terrace, and a serene outdoor garden designed by Madison Cox.
Public Arts, the first new idea since Studio 54 forty years ago and the embodiment of a nighttime renaissance, is another new and creative offering at the hotel. It’s a progressive, avant-garde multimedia performance space like no other, that will be home to the most cutting-edge cultural programming including film screenings, theatrical and dance productions, intimate musical performances, art exhibitions, lectures, talks, readings, product launches, comedy and amateur nights, and even hot sweaty dancing!
“I wanted to create a hotel for my generation, not my parents’, and one that reflected my tastes and sensibilities as well as popular culture at the time. I was responding to cultural shifts that were emerging. I see the exact same opportunity now. That is the reason for PUBLIC,” says Ian Schrager.
“Times change. People change. Culture changes. Luxury as we once knew it has changed. Hotels have not. A new way of living requires a new kind of hotel. There has not been a new idea in the lifestyle hotel space since Ian Schrager’s Morgans, Royalton and Paramount hotels over 25 years ago. Every hotel since then has been derivative of those. The time is right, in this new milieu, for a disruption in hospitality as there clearly is a dislocation in the market. It is the same type of dislocation and void that led Schrager to conceptualize Morgans back in 1982 which created a cultural revolution and changed the industry”.
“Service and comfort are at the heart of PUBLIC and were completely rethought for this new brand response to new desires and needs. PUBLIC captures a vast array of today’s UNIVERSALLY APPEALING SERVICES with great precision while doing away with those that are obsolete and superfluous”.
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Jeff Koons’ “Seated Ballerina” takes center stage at Rockefeller Center
Art is notably more fun when the public gets to enjoy it, and so it’s been proven that thousands of New Yorkers have reveled in the beauty of Jeff Koons’ “Seated Ballerina” when they got their first glimpse of the installation last Wednesday. The enormous ballerina, prominently placed in front of the city’s landmark, is a 45-foot-high inflatable sculpture that depicts a metallic female figure in a powder blue leotard and tutu adjusting her slippers. The piece marks the third time Jeff Koons has displayed one of his monumental work at Rockefeller Center, and it was officially opened by the artist himself on Friday, May 12, 2017.
Jeff Koons is a board member of the ICMEC, Koons helped co-found The Koons Family Institute on International Law & Policy, an initiative that researches the status of child protection legislation around the world.