Lecture 1: Modernism

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Modernity & Modernism: An Introduction Richard Miles [email protected]

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Modernism

Transcript of Lecture 1: Modernism

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Modernity & Modernism: An Introduction

Richard [email protected]

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1.Terms- ‘modern’, ‘modernity’2.Modernity – Industrialisation, Urbanisation – the City3.Modern artists’ response to the city4.Psychology and subjective experience5.Modern art and photography6.Defining ‘modernism’ in art7.Modernism in design

Modernity & Modernism

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The New Woman, photomontage, Spanish Pavilion, Paris International Exhibition, 1937

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The demolition of the Pruitt - Igoe development, St Louis

The Language of Postmodern Architecture (1977)

15 July 1972, 3:32pm -Modernism dies, according to Charles Jencks

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Paris 1900

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Trottoir Roullant ~ (electric moving walkway)

URBANISATION

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Sites of Modernity

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Process of rationality and reason

Enlightenment= period in late 18th C when Scientific / philosophical thinking made leaps and bounds

Secularisation

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The City

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HAUSSMANISATIONParis 1850s on = a New ParisOld Paris architecture of narrow streets & run down housing is ripped outHaussman, (city architect) redesigns ParisLarge Boulevards in favour of narrow streets – this made the streets easier to police = a form of Social Controlalso the ‘dangerous’ elements of the W.C. are moved outside the city centre – the centre becomes an expensive M.C. and Upper class zone

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Kaiserpanorama 1883

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Max Nordau Degeneration 1892 (an anti modernist) wrote about his worries on the modern world he predicted that,

“the end of the 20thC. . . will probably see a generation to whom it will not be injurious to read a dozen square yards of newspapers daily, to be constantly called to the telephone, to be thinking simultaneously of the five continents of the world, to live half their time in a railway carriage or in a flying machine and . . . know how to find [their] ease in the midst of a city inhabited by millions’

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If we start to think about subjective experience . . . [the experience of the individual in the modern world] we start to come close to understanding modern art and the experience of modernity

Modernism

MODERNISM emerges out of the subjective responses of artists / designers to;

MODERNITY

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MODERNISM IN DESIGN

● Anti-historicism● Truth to materials● Form follows function● Technology● Internationalism

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● Anti-historicism – no need to look backward to older styles

“Ornament is crime” – Adolf Loos (1908)

● Truth to materials – simple geometric forms appropriate to the material being used

● Form follows function

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The Bauhaus

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Le Corbusier LC2

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INTERNATIONALISM

● A language of design that could be recognised and understood on an international basis

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Harry Beck, London Underground Map, 1933

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Le Corbusier ‘Plan Voisin’ 1927

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Example of Herbert Bayer’s sans- serif typeface

● He also argued for all text to be lower case, (to ditch capitals)

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Times New Roman FontStanley Morison1932

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Fraktur font

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TECHNOLOGY NEW MATERIALS● Concrete● New technologies of steel● Plastics● Aluminium● Reinforced glass MASS PRODUCTION● Cheaper more widely accessible products● Products made quickly

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TECHNOLOGY● NEW MATERIALS -reinforced resin

and a steel core allowed for the design of the stiletto heel!

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Conclusion● The term modern is not a neutral term – it suggests novelty and

improvement● “Modernity” (1750-1960) – social and cultural experience

● “Modernism” – The range of ideas and styles that sprang from modernity

● Importance of modernism1. a vocabulary of styles 2. art and design education

3. Idea of form follows function