Bauhaus Bodies: Gender, Sexuality, and Body Culture in Modernism's Legendary Art School

Bauhaus Bodies: Gender, Sexuality, and Body Culture in Modernism's Legendary Art School

by Elizabeth Otto (Editor), Patrick Rössler (Editor)

Synopsis

A century after the Bauhaus's founding in 1919, this book reassesses it as more than a highly influential art, architecture, and design school. In myriad ways, emerging ideas about the body in relation to health, movement, gender, and sexuality were at the heart of art and life at the school. Bauhaus Bodies reassesses the work of both well-known Bauhaus members and those who have unjustifiably escaped scholarly scrutiny, its women in particular. In fourteen original, cutting-edge essays by established experts and emerging scholars, this book reveals how Bauhaus artists challenged traditional ideas about bodies and gender. Written to appeal to students, scholars, and the broad public, Bauhaus Bodies will be essential reading for anyone interested in modern art, architecture, design history, and gender studies; it will define conversations and debates during the 2019 centenary of the Bauhaus's founding and beyond.

$31.76

Save:$3.26 (9%)

Quantity

3 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 392
Publisher: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Published: 10 Jan 2019

ISBN 10: 1501344781
ISBN 13: 9781501344787
Book Overview: Reassesses the Bauhaus in relation to ideas about gender, sexuality, health, and movement that were central to this most influential of art institutions.

Media Reviews
Bauhaus Bodies provides a remarkable contribution to our understanding of the Bauhaus and its community by tackling a vital set of issues surrounding the body, gender, and sexuality in modernism. Offering cutting-edge research and exceptional insight, this collection of essays brings together wide-ranging materials across a series of topics related to the politics and cultures of the body, explicating the Bauhaus in greater depth and with compelling nuance. Illustrating the crucial role of embodied experience and new experiments in living, Bauhaus Bodies is an indispensable guide to the school's wider impact on society, the arts, identity, body politics, health and physical culture, movement and space, and in many other social and cultural spheres. * Robin Schuldenfrei, Katja and Nicolai Tangen Lecturer in 20th Century Modernism, The Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London, UK *
Author Bio
Elizabeth Otto is a professor of modern and contemporary art history at The State University of New York at Buffalo. She has published widely on gender issues in Germany's visual culture of the 1920s and 1930s, especially at the Bauhaus. Patrick Roessler is a professor of communications and empirical research methods at the University of Erfurt, Germany. His research has concentrated on media effects, political communication, and the history of visual communication, including Bauhaus graphic design and advertising.