Types of works

Graphic work

Genres

Art > Architecture > Architectural design

Socio-cultural movements

Late modern period / Contemporary period > Artistic movements since the end of the 19th century > Rationalist architecture / Modern movement > Bauhaus

Work

Photography, photomontages and collages

Date of production: 1929

Types of works

Graphic work

Genres

Art > Architecture > Architectural design

Socio-cultural movements

Late modern period / Contemporary period > Artistic movements since the end of the 19th century > Rationalist architecture / Modern movement > Bauhaus

Works

Information about the work and context of creation

Marianne was a pioneer in using photography to capture still lives. She also took some beautiful self-portraits with innovative, different approaches to her own image. Her photomontages are innovative, and had a great influence on the development of graphic design. 

 

Marianne Brandt was part of the Bauhaus universe, which was the result of the contributions of many renowned, avant-garde artists at the time; their goal was to combine art and technology with a modern vision, including the concept of mass production.

It was a school that was only operational for 14 years, between 1919 and 1933, as it was closed by the Nazi regime. Over 1250 students from 29 different countries studied at the Bauhaus. There, they designed metal ashtrays, ceramic cups, tapestries, stained glass windows, lamps, wooden and steel furniture, architectural buildings, etc., all with the spirit of the modern movement that they belonged to. These contributions still influence everyday objects today; we do not realise it, but some of them are in our homes.

Out of those nearly 1300 students, only 24 women graduated. Marianne was among them: she graduated in metallurgy. Most women graduated in textile, since they were all sent to the weaving workshop after the initiation course. Many of them did not settle and made her way through the architecture, metallurgy, photography or carpentry workshops, among others. They stood out in many art and design areas in the school: typography, photography, metallurgy, carpentry, architecture, glass making, painting, ceramics, furniture design, interior design, industrial design, etc.

There were other women students that, for one reason or another, had to quit their studies; but, while they were there, they produced outstanding contributions, which proved that they fully understood the Bauhaus principles. 

Together with graduated architects by Bauhaus Wera Meyer-Waldeck, María Müller, Hilde Reiss and Annemarie Wilke, as well as Annemarie Wimmer, graduated interior decorator, we should add five students who, by circumstances, did not graduate, but contributed to architecture as much or more than what the school offered to them: Friedl Dicker, Benita Otte, Alma Buscher-Siedhoff, Lotte Stam-Beese and Lotte Gerson-Collein.

Some of them survived to World War II in Europe, others migrated to the United States, the Soviet Union, or Turkey, Palestine. Friedl Dicker, the architect, was murdered at the Auschwitz concentration camp; Alma Siedhoff-Buscher, the designer, died in a bombing. 

Indications

She can be used in: 

- History of art

- Architecture

- Industrial design

- Furniture design

- Technology

Documents