There are those who describe Tel Aviv as a
drab, gray city of concrete. However, if you look
beyond the worn buildings’ façade you will
encounter the largest collection of buildings
whose architectural roots can be traced to the
Bauhaus architecture of Germany. It is perhaps
ironic that Tel-Aviv houses the largest number of
buildings designed in an architectural style that
developed in pre-Nazi Germany, a style that came
to an abrupt end in Germany, with the Nazi’s rise
to power. This architectural style is so prevalent
in Tel Aviv that it almost seems as though it were
a local style, but it is not.
There are a
number of characteristics to the
Bauhaus/International Style of architecture:
1) It shuns ornamentation and favors
functionality
2) Uses asymmetry and regularity
versus symmetry
3) It grasps architecture in
terms of space versus mass
Bauhaus buildings are usually cubic, favor
right angles, (although some feature rounded
corners and balconies); they have smooth facades
and an open floor plan.
Bauhaus architecture, whose founding father was
Walter Gropius, developed in Germany in the 1920s
and later in the U.S., in the 1930s. The American
form of this architectural style was dubbed the
International Style after Gropius, Mies van der
Rohe and other leaders of Bauhaus migrated to the
U.S., with the Nazi’s growing influence. The
Bauhaus school in Dessau was closed on April 11th,
1933, by the police, at the insistence of the
National Socialist government.
Purists assert that Bauhaus architecture can
only refer to buildings in Germany and anything
else should be termed International Style – while
others use the terms interchangeably (as is the
case in this issue of Gems in Israel). The term
International Style was really adopted after the
publication of a book that coincided with a 1932
exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New
York. The book, by historian Henry-Russell
Hitchcock and architect Philip Johnson, was
called, The International Style.
Bauhaus architecture was concerned with the
social aspects of design and with the creation of
a new form of social housing for workers. This may
be just another one of the reasons it was embraced
in the newly evolving city of Tel-Aviv, at a time
when socialist ideas were so prevalent. This style
of architecture came about (in part) because of
new engineering developments that allowed the
walls to be built around steel or iron frames.
This meant that walls no longer had to support the
structure, but only enveloped it – from the
outside.
The teachings at the Bauhaus school of design,
which functioned from 1919 to 1933 (first in
Weimar and later in Dessau), were greatly
influenced by the machine age. The school's aim
was to fuse all the arts under the concept of
design. The school had 700 students and was known
for requiring its students to forget everything
they had learned to date.
Gropius engaged some of the best artists of the
day, Paul Klee, Vassily Kandinsky, Lyonel
Feininger, and Oscar Schlemmer, to name a few, to
teach at the school. Influential Bauhaus
architects were Walter Gropius, Mies van der Rohe,
Hannes Meyer and Le Corbusier.
The International Style was a decidedly
different type of architecture that did not rely
on the architecture of the past, but aimed to
establish a new, modern style. In Tel Aviv,
Bauhaus architecture gained a foothold, as there
was no real entrenched architectural style. While
this style of architecture can also be found in
Haifa and Jerusalem as well as in many kibbutzim,
it is most prevalent in Tel Aviv.
Adaptations were made to classic Bauhaus
architecture, to suit the local needs (see Bauhaus
in Tel Aviv).