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Marianne Brandt

 
Modern Design Dictionary: Marianne Brandt

(1893-1983)

The Modernist German designer Marianne Brandt was one of the few women associated with the Bauhaus to make her reputation in design fields outside the conventional arts and crafts territories associated with women such as textiles, weaving, and pottery. Her metalware tea services and light fittings from the 1920s have become widely known, with a number of them produced under licence from the mid-1980s by the Italian firm Alessi.

From 1911 to 1917 Brandt studied fine art at the Royal Saxon Academy for the Fine Arts, working as a freelance artist for some years after graduation. In 1923 she enrolled at the Bauhaus, studying on the Vorkurs (Foundation Course) offered by Josef Albers and László Moholy-Nagy before moving on to the metal workshop in 1925-6 where she served in a managerial capacity from 1927 to 1929. Her domestic metalware designs during the Bauhaus years, like that of many of her academic peers, were influenced by the abstract, geometric forms of Constructivism and De Stijl. They were, however, esentially handcrafted prototypes for industrial production. Her lighting designs included an adjustable ceiling light (1926), designed with Hans Przyrembel for the new Bauhaus buildings at Dessau, and the Kandem bedside table lamp (1927). After gaining her Bauhaus diploma in 1929 she worked briefly in Gropius' studio and then at the Ruppelwerk factory in Gotha from 1930 to 1933 as head of the decorative arts department, before becoming a freelance artist until 1939. Several of her lighting designs were put into production by firms such as Körting & Mathiesen and Leipzig Leutzch, both of Leipzig. After the Second World War, on the invitation of the institution's director Mart Stam, from 1949 to 1951 she taught in the ceramics department of the School of Applied Arts in Dresden. She then moved to the Institute of Industrial Arts in Berlin-Weissensee, where she stayed from 1951 to 1954, before once again resuming fine art activities.

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Ashtray, Bauhaus, designed by Marianne Brandt in 1926

Marianne Brandt (1 October 189318 June 1983), German painter, sculptor, photographer and designer who studied at the Bauhaus school and became head of the metal workshop in 1928. Today, Brandt's designs for household objects such as lamps, ashtrays and teapots are considered the harbinger of modern industrialist design.[1]

Contents

Biography

Brandt was born in Chemnitz as Marianne Liebe. In 1919 she married the Norwegian painter Erik Brandt, with whom she traveled in Norway and France. She trained as a painter before joining the Weimar Bauhaus in 1923. There she became a student of Hungarian modernist theorist and designer László Moholy-Nagy in the metal workshop. She quickly rose to the position of workshop assistant and succeeded Moholy as the workshop's director in 1928, serving in the post for one year and negotiating some of the most important Bauhaus contracts for collaborations with industry. These contracts for the production of lights and other metal workshop designs were a rare example of one of the workshops helping to fund the school. After leaving the Bauhaus for Berlin in 1929, Brandt worked for Walter Gropius in his Berlin studio. She subsequently became the head of metal design at the Ruppel firm in Gotha, where she remained until losing her job in the midst of the ongoing financial depression in 1932.

During the period of National Socialism in Germany, Brandt attempted to find work outside of the country, but family responsibilities called her back to Chemnitz. She was unable to find steady work throughout the period of the Third Reich. In 1939 she did become a member of the "Reichskulturkammer," the official Nazi organization of artists, in order to obtain a few art supplies, which had otherwise been forbidden to her. However, Brandt was never a member of the National Socialist Party. After many years of living apart, she and Erik Brandt officially divorced in 1935.

Brandt died in Kirchberg, Saxony at the age of 89. While the Bauhaus was generally reviled as "decadent" during much of the GDR period, by the end of her life Brandt had a loyal group of students from her many years as a teacher of design.

Work

Brandt's designs for metal ashtrays, tea and coffee services, lamps and other household objects are now recognized as among the best of the Weimar and Dessau Bauhaus. Further, they were among the few Bauhaus designs to be mass-produced during the interwar period, and several of them are currently available as reproductions. In an auction in December 2007, one of her teapots —the Model No. MT49 tea infuser— was sold for a record-breaking $361,000.[1]

Beginning in 1926, Brandt also produced a body of photomontage work, though all but a few were not publicly known until the 1970s after she had abandoned the Bauhaus style and was living in Communist East Germany. The photomontages came to public attention after Bauhaus historian Eckhard Neumann solicited the early experiments, stimulated by resurgent interest in modernist experiment in the West. These photomontages often focus on the complex situation of women in the interwar period, a time when they enjoyed new freedoms in work, fashion and sexuality, yet frequently experienced traditional prejudices. Brandt's montage works were subject of the touring exhibition entitled "Tempo, Tempo! The Bauhaus Photomontages of Marianne Brandt," organized by Elizabeth Otto, which appeared at the Bauhaus Archive in Berlin, Harvard's Busch-Reisinger Museum and the International Center of Photography in New York from 2005 to 2006. Otto's catalogue of the same name explores these works and Brandt's life.

Brandt is also remembered as a pioneering photographer. She created experimental still-life compositions, but it is her series of self portraits which are particularly striking. These often represent her as a strong and independent New Woman of the Bauhaus; other examples show her face and body distorted across the curved and mirrored surfaces of metal balls, creating a blended image of herself and her primary medium at the Bauhaus.

References

External links

Bibliography

  • (German) Brockhage, Hans and Reinhold Lindner. Marianne Brandt. Chemnitz: Chemnitzer Verlag, 2001.
  • (English) Otto, Elizabeth. Tempo, Tempo! The Bauhaus Photomontages of Marianne Brandt. Berlin: Jovis Verlag, 2005.
  • (German) Wynhoff, Elisabeth. Marianne Brandt: Fotografieren am Bauhaus. Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2003.

 
 

 

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Modern Design Dictionary. A Dictionary of Modern Design. Copyright © 2004, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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