Bauhaus

$29.99

An accessible history of the Bauhaus, tracing the ideas behind its conception and its highly influential teaching methods.

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ISBN: 9780500204627 Categories: ,

Frank Whitford

Description

The aesthetic of our contemporary environment, including everything from housing developments to furniture and websites, is partly the result of a school of art and design founded in Germany in 1919, the Bauhaus. While in operation for only fourteen years before being shut down by the Nazis in 1933, the school left an indelible mark on design as well as the practice of art education throughout the world.

Placing the Bauhaus into its socio-historic context, Frank Whitford traces the ideas behind the school’s conception and describes its teaching methods. He examines the activities of the teachers, who included artists as eminent as Paul Klee, Josef Albers and Wassily Kandinsky, and the daily lives of the students. This remains the most accessible and highly illustrated introduction to perhaps the most significant design movement of the last hundred years.

Additional information

Weight 457 g
Dimensions 21.1 x 15.1 cm
Publisher name Thames and Hudson Ltd
Publication date 19 March 2020
Number of pages 216
Format Paperback / softback
Dimensions 21.1 x 15.1 cm
Weight 457 g
Frank Whitford was an art historian and critic, and one of Britain's leading experts on 20th-century German and Austrian art. During his varied career, he lectured on the history of art at University College London and Homerton College, Cambridge, wrote several books and served as a newspaper art critic. From 1983 onwards he was a senior member of Wolfson College, Cambridge.