- Gunta Stölzl
Gunta Stölzl (
5 March 1897 –22 April ,1983 ) was a German textileartist who played a fundamental role in the development of theBauhaus school’s weaving workshop. As theBauhaus ’s only female master she created enormous change within theweaving department as it transitioned from individual pictorial works to modern industrial designs. She joined the Bauhaus as a student in 1920, became a junior master in 1927 and a full master the next year. She was dismissed for political reasons in 1931, a year before the Bauhaus closed under pressure from theNazi s.The textile department was a neglected part of the Bauhaus when Ms. Stölzl began her career, and its active masters were weak on the technical aspects of textile production. She soon became a mentor to other students and reopened the Bauhaus dye studios in 1921. After a brief departure, Stölzl became the school's weaving director in 1925 when it relocated from
Weimar toDessau and expanded the department to increase its weaving and dyeing facilities. She applied ideas from modern art to weaving, experimented with synthetic materials, and improved the department's technical instruction to include courses in mathematics. The Bauhaus weaving workshop became one of its most successful facilities under her direction.Early life
Stölzl was born in
Munich , Bavaria. She attended a high school for the daughters of professionals, graduating in 1913. She began her studies at the Kunstgewerbeschule (School of Applied Arts) in 1914, where she studied glass painting, decorative arts and ceramics under the well known directorRichard Riemerschmid . [Baumhoff Anja. [http://www.guntastolzl.org/gallery/1897708/1/95700545#95700545 Gunta Stölzl] ] In 1916 Stölzl's studies were interrupted by the on-going war and she volunteered to work as a nurse for theRed Cross , behind the front lines until the end ofWorld War I in 1918. Upon her return home she re-immersed herself in her studies at the Kunstgewerbeschule in Munich, where she participated in the school's curriculum reform. It was during this time that Stölzl encountered theBauhaus manifesto. Having decided to continue her studies at the newly formedBauhaus school, Stölzl spent the summer of 1919 in the glass workshop and mural painting classes of the Bauhaus to earn her trial acceptance intoJohannes Itten ’s preliminary course. By 1920, Stölzl had not only been fully accepted into the Bauhaus school, but had received a scholarship to attend.Sigrid Wortmann Weltge. Bauhaus Textiles: Women Artists and the Weaving Workshop. Thames and Hudson, 1993. (ISBN 0-500-28034-7)]tudent life
Within Stölzl’s first year at the
Bauhaus , she began what she referred to as the “women’s department”, which due to the underlying gender roles within the school, eventually became synonymous with the weaving workshop. Stölzl was very active within the weaving department and was immediately seen as a leader among the pack. At the time, the department was putting emphasis on artistic expression and individual works that reflected the teachings and philosophies of the painters who served as Bauhaus masters. TheWeimar Bauhaus had a very relaxed atmosphere that was almost wholly dependent on the students teaching themselves and one another. Unfortunately,Georg Muche , who was the head of the weaving workshop at the time, had very little interest in the craft itself. He saw weaving and other textile arts as ‘women’s work’ and thus was of very little help with the technical processes involved. This meant the students were left to their own devices to figure out all technical aspects of a craft most had little experience working in. Due to this set-up, it is important to look at the Weimar era works visually as opposed to technically.College of the Atlantic. [http://199.33.141.23/campuslife/work/courseprojects/womeninthevisualarts/external96/wvaHomepage.html Women Artists] ]In 1921 Stölzl and two of her friends made a trip to
Italy to view the art and architecture they had studied for further inspiration. After passing her journeyman’s examination as a weaver and taking courses in textiledyeing at a school inKrefeld , Stölzl was able to reopen the previously abandoned dye studios. It was becoming obvious that she was giving direction to the other students, though unofficially, as neither Muche, the form master norHelene Börner , the crafts master, could really teach and promote the students in technical aspects. In 1921, Stölzl collaborated withMarcel Breuer on the [http://www.guntastolzl.org/gallery/1456128#74248012 African Chair] - made of painted wood with a colorful textile weave.The first official Bauhaus exhibition took place in September 1923 in theHaus am Horn building. The building itself, primarily designed by Georg Muche, was a simplistic, highly modern cube structure made largely of steel and concrete. Each room of the house was designed around its specific function and had specially made furniture, hardware etc which had been produced in the Bauhaus workshops. The weaving workshop participated by creating rugs, wall hangings and other objects for various rooms all of which won favorable reviews. With this exhibition,Walter Gropius released an essay titled ‘Art and Technology – A New Unity' which seemed to have a great impact on the women of the weaving workshop. Despite the favorable reviews of their works, the women began to move away from the pictorial imagery and traditional methods they had been working with up to this point and began working abstractly, attempting to make objects more in line withKandinsky ’s teachings of the ‘inner self’.Bauhaus Master
In April 1925, the Weimar Bauhaus closed because it was seen as too leftist and was being rejected by the town. The school reopened in
Dessau , although with considerably less funding. Stölzl, who had previously left the Bauhaus upon graduating to helpItten set up Ontos Weaving Workshops in Herrliberg, nearZurich ,Switzerland , returned to become the weaving studio's technical director, replacing Helene Börner, and work with Georg Muche, who would remain the form master. Although she was not officially made a junior master until 1927, it was clear both the organization and content of the workshop were under her control. It was obvious from the start, the pairing of Muche and Stölzl was not enjoyed by either side, and resulted in Stölzl running the workshop almost single handedly from 1926 onward.The new Dessau campus was equipped with a greater variety of looms and much improved
dyeing facilities, which allowed Stölzl to create a more structured environment. Georg Muche brought inJacquard looms to help intensify production. He saw this as especially important now as the workshops were the school's main source of funding for the new Dessau Bauhaus. The students rejected this and were not happy with the way Muche had used the schools funds. This, among other smaller events, instigated a student uprising within the weaving department. OnMarch 31 ,1927 , despite some staff objections, Muche left the Bauhaus. With his departure, Stölzl took over both as form master and master crafts person of the weaving studio. She was assisted by many other key Bauhaus women, includingAnni Albers ,Ottie Berger andBenita Otte .Stölzl began trying to move weaving away from its ‘woman’s work’ connotations by applying the vocabulary used in modern art, moving weaving more and more in the direction of industrial design. By 1928, the need for practical materials was highly stressed and experimentation with materials such as cellophane became more prominent. Stölzl quickly developed a curriculum which emphasized the use of handlooms, training in the mechanics of weaving and
dyeing , and taught classes in math and geometry, as well as more technical topics such as weave techniques and workshop instruction. The earlier Bauhaus methods of artistic expression were quickly replaced by a design approach which emphasized simplicity and functionality.Stölzl considered the workshop a place for experimentation and encouraged improvisation. She and her students, especially
Anni Albers , were very interested in the properties of a fabric and in synthetic fibers. They tested materials for qualities such as color, texture, structure, resistance to wear, flexibility, light refraction and sound absorption. Stölzl believed the challenge of weaving was to create an aesthetic that was appropriate to the properties of the material. In 1930, Stölzl issued the first ever Bauhaus weaving workshop diplomas and set up the first joint project between the Bauhaus and the Berlin Polytex Textile company which wove and sold Bauhaus designs. 1In 1931 she published an article entitled [http://www.guntastolzl.org/gallery/1936287 “The Development of the Bauhaus Weaving Workshop”] , in the Bauhaus Journal spring issue. Stölzl's ability to translate complex formal compositions into hand woven pieces combined with her skill of designing for machine production made her by far the best instructor the weaving workshop was to have. Under Stölzl's direction, the weaving workshop became one of the most successful faculties of the Bauhaus.Dismissal
The school was constantly under attack as the
Nazi Party gained more power, and the school's sacrifices to remain open were beginning to break its own ideology. DuringMies van der Rohe ’s directorship there was intense pressure from the community for Stölzl to be let go. Van der Rohe required her resignation in 1931, not due to incompetence but because of the surrounding political atmosphere. The students were so opposed to this unjust action they dedicated an entire issue of the school newspaper to Stölzl upon her dismissal. The Dessau Bauhaus was officially closed in 1932 by the Nazis, and the Bauhaus itself officially dissolved onJuly 20 ,1933 .After the Bauhaus
After leaving the Bauhaus in 1931, Stölzl returned to Zurich where she and her partners Gertrud Preiswerk and Heinrich-Otto Hürlimann, also former Bauhaus students, created a private handweaving business called S-P-H Stoffe (S-P-H Fabrics). The business floundered and closed soon after, in 1933, due to financial difficulties. Stölzl became a member of the
Swiss Werkbund in 1932 and in 1934 "Das Werk", the Werkbund’s official magazine, profiled her career. It was also in 1934 that Stölzl received a major commission to make curtains for the Zurich cinema. In 1935, Stölzl and her former partner Heinrich-Otto Hürlimann took another crack at business together and opened S&H Stoffe. By 1937, Stölzl became the sole owner of Handweberei Flora (Hand Weaving Studio Flora) and had joined the Gesellschaft Schweizer Malerinnen, Bildhauerinnen und Kunstgewerblerinnen (Society of Swiss Women Painters, Sculptors and Craftswomen). During the following decades, both theMuseum of Modern Art in New York and theBusch-Reisinger Museum inCambridge, Massachusetts acquired pieces of Stölzl's work while she continued to work at her hand weaving business, creating mainly textiles for interior design. In 1967 Stölzl dissolved her business and devoted all her time to tapestry weaving, a large shift in focus. It was also in 1967 that theVictoria and Albert Museum acquired her designs and samples, resulting in major national and international collections.Stölzl died in 1983 in Zurich.
Timeline
*1914-1916 Studies glass painting, ceramics and decorative painting at the Kunstgewerbeschule (School of Applied Arts) in Munich
*1916-1918 Works as a Red Cross Nurse behind the front lines
*1919 Continues studies at Kunstgewerbeschule in Munich, participates in curriculum reform. Encounters Bauhaus manifesto.
*1919-1923 Studies at the Bauhaus school withItten ,Klee andKandinsky .
*1922 Attends a course indyeing techniques in Krefeld and establishesdyeing facilities at the Bauhaus
*1923 Passes journeyman's exam; continues working in the weaving workshop.
*1924 Helps Itten establish Ontos Weaving Workshops near Zurich
*1925 Assumes position of technical director at Dessau weaving workshop, directs her students' practical and theoretical studies.
*1927 Appointed as Jungmeister (Junior Master) for the entire weaving workshop, the Bauhaus’ first and only female master.
*1927 Experiments with new materials such as cellophane and ‘iron yarn’, and begins to attempt jacquard weaving.
*1929 Marries the Israeli (Palestinian) architecture student Arieh Sharon and loses German citizenship. Daughter Yael born.
*1930 First diplomas of the Bauhaus weaving workshop are issued by Stölzl.
*1931 Publishes ‘Development of the Bauhaus Weaving Workshop’
*1931 Forced to resign as director of the weaving workshop. Emigrates to Switzerland and forms a private hand weaving business in Zurich, S-P-H Stoffe with Gertrud Preiswerk and Heinrich-Otto Hürlimann.
*1932 Becomes a member of the Swiss Werkbund.
*1933 SPH Stoffe Dissolves due to finicial difficulties.
*1934 Receives commission for curtains for the Cinema Urban, Zurich. Das Werk magazine profiles her career.
*1935 Partnership with Hürlimann to form S&H Stoffe.
*1936 Stölzl and Sharon divorce.
*1937 Becomes sole owner of Handweberei Flora (Hand Weaving Studio Flora). Joins the Gesellschaft Schweizer Malerinnen, Bildhauerinnen und Kunstgewerblerinnen (Society of Swiss Women Painters, Sculptors and Craftswomen)
*1941 Participates in the interior of the Swiss pavilion, Lyon.
*1942 Marries Willy Stadler, becomes a Swiss citizen
*1943 Birth of second daughter, Monika, in Zurich
*1949-1963Busch-Reisinger Museum and MoMA acquire works by Stölzl
*1967-69 Dissolves hand weaving business, devotes herself to tapestry and weaving her own designs. theVictoria and Albert Museum acquires designs and fabric samples; major national and international collections.
*1983 Dies April 22 1983 in Zurich at the age of 86.ee also
*
Bauhaus
*Weaving
*Fiber art
*Anni Albers
*Marguerite Wildenhain
*Johannes Itten
*Marcel Breuer
*Paul Klee
*Wassily Kandinsky Notes
References
*Bayer, Herbert, Walter Gropius and Ise Gropius, eds. 1900-Bauhaus 1919-1928. Boston, MA, USA: Charles T. Branford Company, 1959.
*Whitford, Frank. Bauhaus. London:Thames and Hudson Ltd.:1984. (ISBN 0-500-20193-5)External links
* [http://www.guntastolzl.org The Gunta Stölzl Foundation] - Extensive official site
* [http://www.bauhaus.de/bauhaus1919/biographien/biographie_stoelzl.htm Bauhaus-Archiv, Berlin: Stölzl's page]
* [http://www.bauhaus.de/english/bauhaus1919/werkstaetten/werkstaetten_weberei.htm Bauhaus-Archiv, Berlin: The Weaving Workshop]
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