To view prices and purchase online, please login or create an account now.



Nordic Design: The Response to the Bauhaus

Hardback

Main Details

Title Nordic Design: The Response to the Bauhaus
Authors and Contributors      Edited by Tobias Hoffmann - Broehan-Museum, Berlin
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:304
Dimensions(mm): Height 260,Width 220
Category/GenreExhibition catalogues and specific collections
Industrial / commercial art and design
Furniture design
ISBN/Barcode 9783897905825
Audience
General
Illustrations 219 colour

Publishing Details

Publisher Arnoldsche
Imprint Arnoldsche
Publication Date 9 December 2019
Publication Country Germany

Description

Nordic Design reveals the exceptional design objects from individual Nordic countries through essays and large-format illustrations that identify the influences and explore individualistic artistic positions. The publication Nordic Design, launched by the Broehan Museum in Berlin to mark its exhibition of the same name, takes as its theme the reaction of Nordic countries to German modernism and the Bauhaus. In doing so, the individual countries find a common creative denominator under the auspices of their own national characteristics. Thus the special living conditions in Finland lead to unique aesthetic outcomes, where Alvar Aalto's interpretation of functional design became the foundation of Finland's own path to modernism. In Sweden, on the other hand, German concepts merged with local traditions; in accordance with the Swedish welfare state, all levels of the population should have access to good design. Consequently from the 1960s on, Ikea turned Swedish concepts into export successes across the world. In Denmark the focus is handcrafts, as opposed to industrial manufacture. With Kaare Klint, the father of Danish design, putting people and their anatomy at the core of design, in the 1950s and 1960s Danish design became the epitome of the Scandinavian aesthetic. In the Nordic countries, it is not the avant-garde form - as is frequently found in Germany - but rather a bespoke solution for a specific task that stands at the fore. Thus Scandinavian functionalism does not prevail as some-thing avant-garde but instead becomes the constant that defines the identity of the Nordic nations.