Activities per year
Abstract
"The whole technical power of painting," wrote John Ruskin in the Elements of Drawing, "depends on our recovery of what might be called the innocence of the eye; that is to say, a sort of childish perception of these flat stains of colour, merely as such, without consciousness of what they signify." Ruskin's radical transformation of the artist into a child-like visionary, the so-called innocent eye, would go on to become one of the foundations of the 20th century avant-garde and a key premise of Modernist design pedagogy. Through teachers such as Paul Klee and Johannes Itten, the Weimar Bauhaus curriculum developed a comprehensive re-ordering of art education based on the innocent eye. At the same time, and much less studied, the Bauhaus workshops produced a number of now iconic toys that were material embodiments of the innocent eye and demonstrated the potential of child-like play as a fundamental aspect of art and design education.
Building on early pedagogical toys designed specifically for the kindergarten, such as the Fröbel blocks, the Bauhaus toys delighted in the potential of toys to become instruments of social and artistic reform for adults as well. Toys such as the Bauspiele Schiff by Alma Siedhoff-Buscher and Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack's Optischer Farbmischer were not only objects of play for children, they were also intended as mediating devices for designers and artists to become child-like. Radical for their time, the Bauhaus toys were characterized by fundamental physical conditions such as weight, tactility and color, and they purposely transgressed the notion that a toy should represent something else, such as an animal or human figure. Instead, relying on the principle of the innocent eye, the toys strengthened the analogy between the act of design and play, an enduring legacy still found throughout design education worldwide.
Building on early pedagogical toys designed specifically for the kindergarten, such as the Fröbel blocks, the Bauhaus toys delighted in the potential of toys to become instruments of social and artistic reform for adults as well. Toys such as the Bauspiele Schiff by Alma Siedhoff-Buscher and Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack's Optischer Farbmischer were not only objects of play for children, they were also intended as mediating devices for designers and artists to become child-like. Radical for their time, the Bauhaus toys were characterized by fundamental physical conditions such as weight, tactility and color, and they purposely transgressed the notion that a toy should represent something else, such as an animal or human figure. Instead, relying on the principle of the innocent eye, the toys strengthened the analogy between the act of design and play, an enduring legacy still found throughout design education worldwide.
Original language | English |
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Publication date | 8 Feb 2019 |
Number of pages | 1 |
Publication status | Published - 8 Feb 2019 |
Event | Bauhaus Effects: Dublin Conference 2019: UCD/UCC/NCAD/ Goethe Institut - National College of Art and Design, Dublin/University College Dublin/Goethe Institut Dublin, Dublin, Ireland Duration: 7 Feb 2019 → 9 Feb 2019 https://bauhauseffects.com |
Conference
Conference | Bauhaus Effects |
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Location | National College of Art and Design, Dublin/University College Dublin/Goethe Institut Dublin |
Country/Territory | Ireland |
City | Dublin |
Period | 07/02/2019 → 09/02/2019 |
Internet address |
Keywords
- Bauhaus
- Toys
- Design
- Ruskin
- Pedagogy
- Weimar
Artistic research
- No
Activities
- 1 Organisation and participation in conference
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Bauhaus Effects
Jonathan Foote (Speaker)
7 Feb 2019 → 9 Feb 2019Activity: Participating in or organising an event › Organisation and participation in conference
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