Bauhaus Magazine
issue 2 – Israel

Tel Aviv is more closely associated with the Bauhaus name than any other city outside Germany. But this myth does not stand up to historical inspection. As Sharon Rotbard points out in this magazine, the modern architecture of the ‘White City’ has little to do with the Bauhaus. The myth of the ‘Bauhaus City’ would appear to owe more to the Israelis’ desire to see also, between everything else, the positive in Germany.
But why, then, a magazine on the Bauhaus and Israel? Freed from the myth, the Bauhaus in Israel may be revealed in an entirely new light. In the homes of German-speaking immigrants, or Jeckes, one can find, for example, material vestiges of migration that refer to European modernism and sometimes even to the Bauhaus itself. Admittedly, far more influence was exerted by the work of over two dozen erstwhile Bauhaus students in Palestine, then later in Israel, including photographers and filmmakers, sculptors and weavers, graphic designers and toy makers and, above all else, the renowned architects and town planners. Having migrated from the Bauhaus Dessau to Palestine or vice versa in the 1930s, they influenced the formation of the new State of Israel in the critical phases before and after its foundation in 1948. This embraced the reformation of the state’s leading art school, the Bezalel Academy in Jerusalem, by the Weimar Bauhaus student Mordecai Ardon to the master plan for the settlement of the entire state which came about under the direction of Arieh Sharon. But the Bauhaus students Shmuel Mestechkin, Arieh Sharon and Munio Weinraub made the most significant contribution with their work on the design of the kibbutzim from the 1930s to the 1970s. The main exhibition at the Bauhaus Dessau, the opening of which coincides with the publication of this magazine, is dedicated to these built utopian societies. In these fundamentally democratically organised socialist settlements, Jewish migrants from Central and Eastern Europe, together with the Bauhaus students, realised key ideas and ideals of European Modernism. Their common goal was the creation of the ‘Neue Menschen’ (the new people) and the functional organisation of their living environment. In the process, they adhered to a functional understanding of architecture which had, most notably, been informed by the second Bauhaus director Hannes Meyer. These visions were most clearly manifested in the kibbutzim – where they demonstrated their cogency as well as their weaknesses. The nationwide protests in the Israeli cities this past summer showed how topical Meyer’s motto “Volksbedarf statt Luxusbedarf” (the needs of the people instead of the need for luxury) still is, even if entirely different solutions are being sought today. However, the Jewish resettlement of Palestine in the spirit of modernism also raises questionable aspects: here, the projects of the avant-garde did not impinge on unclaimed dunes, but on the local Arab population. Solutions to the resulting tensions, which were evident at the time have yet to be found.
Philipp Oswalt, Herausgeber
C O V E R S T O R Y : Israel
- Bauhaus Buildings Without Bauhaus: ZVI EFRAT on the evolution of a generic modern architecture in Israel
C O V E R S T O R Y : Israel – State
- The Great Dream - How the former Bauhaus student Arieh Sharon planned the settlement of the Promised Land as a hexagonal structure is revealed by JOACHIM TREZIB
- Is there Such a Thing as Jewish Architecture? - …is a question Hannes Meyer once asked Arieh Sharon. The architect ZVI EFRAT answers his question 74 years later
C O V E R S T O R Y : Israel – Community
- The Reinvention of Utopia - REGINA BITTNER and WERNER MÖLLER converse on Skype with GALIA BAR OR and YUVAL YASKY about the future of the kibbutz movement
- White City, Black City - Tel Aviv is inventing a history for itself based on Bauhaus and Modernism – and forgets its Arab Roots, maintains SHARON ROTBARD
- City for All - DOV KHENIN fights against the gentrification of the Israeli cities with his movement Ir Lekulanu. He spoke to PHILIPP OSWALT
C O V E R S T O R Y : Israel – Individual
- A Zionist Bauhaus - How Mordecai Ardon reinvented the famous Bezalel Academy in Jerusalem, complete with preliminary course, is revealed by GIDEON OFRAT
- Living with the Bauhaus - Photographer UDI KATZMAN visited the Jeckes in their homes – and found modernism in everyday life
- Routes to the Promised Land - How the Jewish Bauhaus students found their way to Palestine, with a dimploma from Dessau in hand
- A Communist Muslim in Israel - The Bosnian Bauhaus student Selman Selmanagic worked in Jerusalem as an architect – and changed identities as needed, by AIDA ABADZIC HODZIC and INES SONDER
M A G A Z I N E
News from the Bauhaus world, reports on current news, useful tips and entertaining articles – from Max Bill to Steve Jobs, from Hangzhou to Bethany, from the Bauhaus wallpaper to the glass facade, from Lego to Ikea.