The Bauhaus School of Design was a modern design institution
that opened on April 12, 1919 in Weimar, Germany. The school was formed when
Walter Gropius replaced the former director of the Weimar Arts and Crafts
School, Henri van de Velde. Gropius was confirmed as the new director of an
institution formed by merging the applied arts – oriented Weimar Arts and
Crafts School with a fine arts school, the Weimar Art Academy. Gropius was
permitted to name the new school Das Staatliche Bauhaus which translated to the
State Home for Building. “Recognizing the common roots of both the fine and
applied visual arts, Gropius sought a new unity of art and technology as he
enlisted a generation of artists in a struggle to solve problems of visual
design created by industrialism” (Meggs 326-327).
The Bauhaus years at Weimar were inspired from
expressionism, producing very visionary pieces of art. As I researched, I found
a Bauhaus educator who seemed to reflect this style of design. Wassily
Kandinsky was born in 1866 in Moscow. As a child, he was inspired by the colors
of nature. He studied music, law, economics and ethnography, but eventually he
decided to become a painter. At the age of 30, Kandinsky enrolled in the art
school in Munich. He wasn’t granted admission immediately, so he began to learn
art on his own. He saw an exhibit of paintings by Claude Monet, and he was
taken with the impressionistic style of Monet’s “Haystacks.” As I searched to find a Kandinsky painting that was reflective of Monet's painting, I found "Beach Baskets in Holland." I thought that this had a similar look to Haystacks, with the objects being the main focus, with the impressionist style.
Claud Monet "Haystacks: Snow Effect" 1891 |
Wassily Kandinsky "Beach Baskets in Holland" 1904 |
“During these prentice years his experiments in
Impressionism and post-Impressionism only served to intensify his abiding
memories of the romantic, mythical Russia of his youth, and his art took on the
character of a mystical quest, a longed-for return to a lost ideal” (Wassily
Kandinsky and his paintings 1). His paintings began to serve the spiritual
values that inspired them.
Kandinsky returned to Germany, he joined the teaching staff
of the Bauhaus in 1923. He made a fresh start and began working on a more
scientific basis. “Composing in an essentially dynamic key expressive of
movement, growth and flux, he worked out a precise, minutely calculated idiom
of his own, a formulation of points and lines, combining and contending with
each other to create curves, circles and significant geometric figures”
(Wassily Kandinsky and his paintings 2). “Kandinsky’s work began transforming.
Individual geometrical elements increasingly entered the foreground, and his
palette was sated with cold color harmonies” (Oleg Ku 1). “Composition VIII” by Kandinsky is a good
example of his style of design during the Weimar period. Another painting that
he created a few years later was “Small Dream in Red.”
Wassily Kandinsky "Composition VIII" 1923 |
Wassily Kandinsky "Small Dream in Red" 1925 |
At this time the last transformation of his painting system
happened. Now Kandinsky did not use a combination of primary colours but worked
with soft, refined, subtle nuances of colour. “Simultaneously, it supplemented
and complicated the repertoir of forms: on the foreground there appear
biomorphic elements, which feel at ease in the space of a picture as if
floating all over the surface of a canvas” (Oleg Ku 2). We can see this
difference clearly in his painting from 1939, “Complex-Simple.”
Wassily Kandinsky "Complex-Simple" 1939 |
“ There is only one road to follow, that of analysis of the basic elements in order to arrive ultimately at an adequate graphic expression."
- Wassily Kandinsky
Works Cited
Kandinsky, Wassily. Composition VIII. Digital image.
Guggenheim.org. N.p., n.d. Web. 2 Mar. 2014.
<http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/collections/collection-online/artwork/1924>.
Ku, Oleg. "The Biography." Wassilykandinsky.net.
N.p., Apr. 2008. Web. 2 Mar. 2014. <http://www.wassilykandinsky.net/>.
Meggs, Philip B., and Alston W. Purvis. Meggs' History of
Graphic Design. Hoboken: J. Wiley & Sons, 2005. Print.
"Wassily Kandinsky and His Paintings."
Wassily-kandinsky.org. N.p., n.d. Web. 02 Mar. 2014.
<http://www.wassily-kandinsky.org/index.jsp>.