Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Architect as Producer: Hannes Meyer and the Proletarianisation of the Western Architect

View through CrossRef
With the foundation of the Bauhaus, Walter Gropius advocated an end to the division between arts and crafts. Contrary to the idea of architecture as art, the programme of the school aimed to assimilate architecture with industry in order to satisfy collective social needs. Yet, despite this programmatic declaration, such a project was realised only after Gropius’ departure from the Bauhaus, under the controversial directorship (1927–1930) of the Swiss architect Hannes Meyer. Meyer achieved unprecedented success both in terms of academic production and financial performance. Yet his realisations were paralleled by the leftist radicalisation of the school’s politics: Meyer transformed the workshops into factory production units and the students into industrial workers. Eventually, the politicisation of the school cost Meyer his office and a negative reputation in historical records that still holds today. This article posits that Meyer achieved his success at the Bauhaus not despite his radical allegiance, but precisely because of it. The realism of Meyer’s strategy is evaluated through his capacity to anticipate many developments in the organisation of architectural production. In particular, his critique of intellectual labour in architecture is confronted with the contemporary proletarisation of architects in the Western world.
Center for Open Science
Title: The Architect as Producer: Hannes Meyer and the Proletarianisation of the Western Architect
Description:
With the foundation of the Bauhaus, Walter Gropius advocated an end to the division between arts and crafts.
Contrary to the idea of architecture as art, the programme of the school aimed to assimilate architecture with industry in order to satisfy collective social needs.
Yet, despite this programmatic declaration, such a project was realised only after Gropius’ departure from the Bauhaus, under the controversial directorship (1927–1930) of the Swiss architect Hannes Meyer.
Meyer achieved unprecedented success both in terms of academic production and financial performance.
Yet his realisations were paralleled by the leftist radicalisation of the school’s politics: Meyer transformed the workshops into factory production units and the students into industrial workers.
Eventually, the politicisation of the school cost Meyer his office and a negative reputation in historical records that still holds today.
This article posits that Meyer achieved his success at the Bauhaus not despite his radical allegiance, but precisely because of it.
The realism of Meyer’s strategy is evaluated through his capacity to anticipate many developments in the organisation of architectural production.
In particular, his critique of intellectual labour in architecture is confronted with the contemporary proletarisation of architects in the Western world.

Related Results

Zero to hero
Zero to hero
Western images of Japan tell a seemingly incongruous story of love, sex and marriage – one full of contradictions and conflicting moral codes. We sometimes hear intriguing stories ...
The Architect as Producer: Hannes Meyer and the Proletarianisation of the Western Architect
The Architect as Producer: Hannes Meyer and the Proletarianisation of the Western Architect
With the foundation of the Bauhaus, Walter Gropius advocated an end to the division between arts and crafts. Contrary to the idea of architecture as art, the programme of the schoo...
The Architect as Producer: Hannes Meyer and the Proletarianisation of the Western Architect
The Architect as Producer: Hannes Meyer and the Proletarianisation of the Western Architect
With the foundation of the Bauhaus, Walter Gropius advocated an end to the division between arts and crafts. Contrary to the idea of architecture as art, the programme of the schoo...
Hannes Meyer: Soviet Architect. Life and Work in the USSR, 1930–1936 [PDF, E-Book]
Hannes Meyer: Soviet Architect. Life and Work in the USSR, 1930–1936 [PDF, E-Book]
Swiss architect and urban planner, the second director of the Bauhaus Dessau, Hannes Meyer, spent about six years in the USSR—from 1930 to 1936. This book presents the first in-dep...
Nitrogen Gas Adsorption Filter (NgAF) to enhance producer gas quality
Nitrogen Gas Adsorption Filter (NgAF) to enhance producer gas quality
Abstract Biomass gasification is a thermochemical conversion process of solid biomass into a gaseous fuel called producer gas that can be used to generate power and ...
Meyer, Hannes (1889–1954)
Meyer, Hannes (1889–1954)
Hannes Meyer was a Swiss modernist architect, educator, and the second director of the Bauhaus from 1928 to 1930. He believed that architecture and planning are social issues and t...
Michael y Margot Loewe en el nacimiento de las vanguardias.
Michael y Margot Loewe en el nacimiento de las vanguardias.
A pesar de la amplia bibliografía sobre arquitectos del Movimiento Moderno y sobre los debates de las Vanguardias, aún permanecen obras sin estudiar de arquitectos y artistas, cuyo...
Producer Gas Composition Prediction using Artificial Neural Network Algorithm
Producer Gas Composition Prediction using Artificial Neural Network Algorithm
Nowadays, methods to increase efficiency in producer gas have become major issues in biomass gasification research. Producer gas is a renewable energy source that does not take as ...

Back to Top