Walter Gropius

14
Walter Gropius 1883-1969 “The building is the ultimate goal of all fine artThe Bauhaus Manifesto, 1919.

Transcript of Walter Gropius

Page 1: Walter Gropius

Walter Gropius1883-1969

“The building is the ultimate goal of all fine art”The Bauhaus Manifesto, 1919.

Page 2: Walter Gropius

The chronological contextof Gropius’ architecture

Chronological context in Architecture- Modernism to Postmodernism -

1890s 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s

First generationmodernists

Second generation modernists

Third generationmodernists

The pioneers of modernism.They each treated form, space,structure, materials and ornament innovel ways.

These were the architects of ‘highmodernism’- the universalInternational Style- as well as thefashionable Art Deco period.

These were the architects ofPostmodernism.They reacted against the orthodoxy ofhigh modernism.

Peter Behrens - Berlin Walter Gropius Frank Gehry

Auguste Perret - Paris Le Corbusier Philip Johnson

C. R. Mackintosh - Glasgow Mies van der Rohe Charles Moore

Otto Wagner - Vienna Gerrit Reitveld I. M. Pei

Adolf Loos - Vienna William Van Allen Michael Greaves

Louis Sullivan - Chicago Napier Art Deco architects Louis Kahn

Frank Lloyd Wright - Chicago and mid-western states of USA Robert Venturi

Page 3: Walter Gropius

The context of his architectureGeographical context:

Walter Gropius was a German designer and architect whose teaching and practice were

based originally in Berlin and Dessau, Germany.

He migrated to the USA in 1937 and taught and practiced in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Cambridge

Dessau

Page 4: Walter Gropius

Context continued…Historical context:

Walter Gropius was a major pioneer of the modern movement. Through his teaching he became one of the most influential designers of the 20th century. His most significant building is the Bauhaus Building at Dessau, constructed in 1925-26.

Gropius was a second generation modernist and a contemporary of his fellow German architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, both of whom were architecture students of Peter Behrens from 1908-10.

In 1919 Walter Gropius established the Bauhaus, which became the most famous and influential design school of the 20th century. The creation of the Bauhaus was an extension of the Deutscher Werkbund, a group of German architects, designers and industrialists who sought to merge artistic design and creation with industrial mass-production to produce affordable, high quality, machine-made products and appliances. Watch this short video of the context of the Bauhaus.

In 1928 Gropius resigned as director of the Bauhaus and in 1937 he emigrated to the United States (Mies van der Rohe, the third and last Bauhaus director, had already emigrated there in 1933 after the Nazi’s closed the Bauhaus.) Gropius lectured at Harvard University in Cambridge Massachusetts and he later established The Architects Collaborative (TAC), a major architectural firm, one of their significant buildings being the former Pan Am Building, (now the MetLife Building) 1958-63, (recently voted by New Yorkers as the building they most wanted demolished!)

Gropius always adopted a collaborative approach to design. While studying under Peter Behrens he met Adolf Meyer with whom he worked on the design and construction of their first significant building, the Fagus Shoe-last Factory, 1911-13, and at the Bauhaus. He employed the most radical and innovative artist-designers to staff the Bauhaus, including Marcel Breuer who he continued working with in the United States.

Page 5: Walter Gropius

Context continued…Social context: “Together let us desire, conceive, and create the new [building] of the future, which

will embrace architecture and sculpture and painting in one unity and which will one day rise toward heaven from the hands of a million workers.”This statement by Gropius indicates his concern for the Gesamtkunstwerk, the building stylistically unified with all its furnishings and fixtures. It also reveals the influence of the Dutch De Stijl movement which sought to unite the visual arts of architecture, painting and sculpture into one seamless environment. This concept, derived from William Morris and the English Arts and Crafts movement, and reflected in the more recent organic architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright, was embraced by Gropius, but with an industrial aesthetic and means of production in mind.

Walter Gropius embraced the philosophy of his teacher Peter Behrens (and that of other members of the Deutscher Werkbund) to affect a change in the German social structure from a class-divided society to an industrially-based, egalitarian mass society. This is evident in the types of buildings that Gropius chose to design; buildings for the masses, for the workers: factories, schools, apartment blocks, and commercial buildings. This rather left-wing socialist philosophy eventually led to the closure of Gropius’ Bauhaus by the Nazi’s in 1933. Bauhaus ideas were however embraced by communist Russia and the commercial, mass-production economy of American.

Like Peter Behrens before him, Gropius’ wanted to reconcile artistic design with modern materials and industrial methods of production. He wanted to create well-designed, useful, everyday objects and appliances that were accessible and affordable for the masses. This required mass-production, which in turn necessitated objects be made, at least in part, of industrial materials and standardised components. Standardisation became a design issue at this time because it limited the freedom and scope of artist-designers, and not all Bauhaus creations made it to the consumer mass market.

Page 6: Walter Gropius

Two significant Gropius buildings.

The Fagus Shoe-last Factory,Alfeld, Germany, 1911-13

The Bauhaus Building,Dessau, Germany, 1925-

26

Page 7: Walter Gropius

Stylistic features of the Fagus Factory

The skeletal frame enables the walls

to become transparent screens to

admit sun, air and light for workers.

This building, built only a few years

after Behrens’ AEG Turbine Factory,

has been cited as marking thebeginning of 20th century

architecture.

A clear expression of industrialmaterials: steel, brick, plate

glass.Monumental rectangular form,clean lines, standardised

elements,no ornament, a machine

aesthetic.The corner stairwell exploits thestructural potential of reinforcedconcrete. The cantilevered stairs

andlandings hang freely in space and

arescreened by a structurally

independenttransparent skin of glass.

Page 8: Walter Gropius

Context of the Fagus Factory Although the skeletal nature of this building’s structure had already been

pioneered byearlier modernists, it is the architectural expression of this building’s structure

that issignificant.Identify stylistic differences between the structural elements and the wall

planes of thesethree progressive buildings connected with Walter Gropius.

Peter Behrens,AEG Turbine

Factory,1908.

Walter Gropius,Fagus Shoe

Factory,1911-13.

Walter Gropius,Bauhaus

Workshops,1926.

Page 9: Walter Gropius

Stylistic features of the Bauhaus Building

■ metal frames ■ asymmetrical composition ■ horizontal windows■ flat roofs

■ transparency ■ internal skeletal structures ■ cantilevered elements ■ white walls

■ open, fluid space ■ glass ‘curtain’ walls ■ windows flush with wall plane ■ functionalist, purist, industrial, machine aesthetic ■ standardised, modular

components■ lightweight, floating effect ■ exposed, utilitarian fixtures Observe other stylistic

features here and here

Page 10: Walter Gropius

Form and function in the Bauhaus Building

Accommodation5 stories +

basement,28 student

apartmentswith kitchenettes,gymnasium,

laundry,lockers, bathrooms.

Communal area1 story plus

basement,houses divisible

diningand theatre space.

The bridge2 stories raised on stilts,lower level contains

mastersoffices, upper level

housesthe architecture

department.

Workshop wing 3 stories plus basement, contains

printing,dying, sculpture, carpentry, weaving,

mural,metal workshops, exhibition spaces.

Technical School3 stories plus

basement,houses classrooms,

library,administrative offices.

Page 11: Walter Gropius

What was the Bauhaus?Watch this 3-part video about the Bauhaus (Part One, Part Two, Part Three)

From the video research answers to these key questions about the Bauhaus:Part One:1. What did Gropius establish in the southern German city of Weimar in 1919?2. What was the aim of the Bauhaus?3. List EIGHT different artistic disciplines taught at the Bauhaus.4. Give TWO reasons why the Bauhaus moved to Dessau in 1926.5. a) What aspect of art did Wassily Kandinsky and Paul Klee teach?

b) What artistic discipline did Mahology Nagy teach?6. List FIVE different functions of the Bauhaus complex expressed by the building’s

design and asymmetrical composition.Part Two:7. State TWO ways Gropius gave prominence to the architecture workshop, the most

important workshop of the Bauhaus.8. Describe the visual effect, the structure and functional issues of the glass curtain

wall of the studio workshop wing of the Bauhaus.9. State TWO industrial influences acknowledged by Gropius’ at this time.10. How was the Bauhaus building designed so that “movement, encounters and

confrontation between students, areas and disciplines” was achieved?Part Three:11. What were the flat roofs used for?12. List THREE interior features (or fixtures) that emphasise the functional aesthetics

of the Bauhaus building.13. How was colour used in a functional way in the Bauhaus complex?14. Where did the Bauhaus ‘masters’ live and how did some of them react to their

supposedly functional villas?

Page 12: Walter Gropius

Examples of Bauhaus design

.

Joost Schmidt, BauhausExhibition poster, 1923

El Lissitzky, typography, 1924

Wilhelm Wagenfeld, lamp, 1924

Marianne Brundt, teapot, 1924

Marcel Breuer, Wassily Chair, 1923

Mies van der Rohe, D42 Armchair, 1927

Page 13: Walter Gropius

The Gropius House, Lincoln, Massachusetts, 1938

The Gropius’ wanted their American home to reflect its surroundings and traveled around New

England studying its vernacular architecture. In designing the house, Gropius combined traditional

elements of New England architecture such as clapboard, brick, and fieldstone, with new, innovative

materials, such as glass block, acoustical plaster, and chromed banisters, along with the latest

technology in fixtures.

Gropius carefully sited the house to complement its site on a rise overlooking an apple orchard and

fields. The house was built with economy in mind. The screened porch and terraces extend the

living spaces outdoors, it is sited for maximum ventilation and passive solar heating, and all fixtures

and building supplies were factory-made items readily available in the United States. Using the

Bauhaus design approach the house utilizes standard materials and products. The result is a

regionally inspired house that employs the philosophy and goals of the modern movement.

Page 14: Walter Gropius

The Gropius House, Lincoln, Massachusetts, 1938Visit the house here to answer these questions:1. State THREE parts of the house that use

materials traditional to New England buildings.2. State THREE parts of the house that use new,

industrial materials of the time.3. Give FIVE features of the house that are

typical of International Style buildings?4. Along with the Bauhaus at Dessau, this house

is an excellent example of the functionalist architecture of‘high modernism’, the so-called International Style.List SEVEN particularly functional features of this house.

5. How does Gropius use light and shadow to enliven the house?6. This house brings a European modernist style into an

American cultural context. State TWO means Gropius used toadapt this house to its American cultural context.

7. Who designed much of the furniture for the house and how ishe connected with Gropius?

8. List THREE Bauhaus items Gropius placed in the house.