Marcel Breuer 1902-1981 Fauteuil 'Wassily' pour Gavina 1970. - source Aste Bolaffi.
22 notes
·
View notes
Magnes Krzeslo Marcel Breuer Bauhaus 1925
276 notes
·
View notes
Department Store “De Bijenkorf” (1953-57) in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, by Marcel Breuer & Abraham Elzas
147 notes
·
View notes
Marcel Breuer: Cesca Armchair (1928)
379 notes
·
View notes
Marcel Breuer Armchair/Lounge Chair 1928–1929
280 notes
·
View notes
Ezra Stoller - Whitney Museum, New York, 1966
28 notes
·
View notes
Whitney Museum, Marcel Breuer, New York,, Photo by Ezra Stoller, 1966
248 notes
·
View notes
The Bauhaus, 1919–1933
Paul Klee (Swiss, 1879-1940) • Senecio or Head of a Man Going Senile • 1922 • Kunstmuseum Basel, Switzerland
“A drawing is simply a line going for a walk.“ – Paul Klee
The Bauhaus was founded in 1919 in the city of Weimar by German architect Walter Gropius (1883–1969). Its core objective was a radical concept: to reimagine the material world to reflect the unity of all the arts. Gropius explained this vision for a union of art and design in the Proclamation of the Bauhaus (1919), which described a utopian craft guild combining architecture, sculpture, and painting into a single creative expression. Gropius developed a craft-based curriculum that would turn out artisans and designers capable of creating useful and beautiful objects appropriate to this new system of living.
Read the rest of the essay here.
"Form follows function" (Bauhaus design principle)
Marcel Breuer (Hungarian-German, 1902-1981) • B3 “Wassily” Armchair • 1925 • chrome-plated steel, canvas upholstery • Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City
"I am as much interested in the smallest detail as in the whole structure." – Marcel Breur
Annie Albers (German, 1899-1994) • Wall tapestry • Designed, 1925; woven, 1983
"Creating is the most intense excitement one can come to know." –Annie Albers
The Bauhaus was eventually closed under pressure from the Nazi regime, which branded the school, and modernism in general, as un-German.
50 notes
·
View notes