Product Details
Marguerite Wildenhain and the Bauhaus: An Eyewitness Anthology

Marguerite Wildenhain and the Bauhaus: An Eyewitness Anthology
From South Bear Press

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Product Description

11 x 8.5 in. 776 pages. 837 illustrations (color, and black and white). More than ten years in the making, this is an exhaustive collection of essays, memoirs, interviews, diary excerpts, art works and archival photographs. It is the first detailed account of the life of French-born American potter Marguerite Wildenhain (1896-1985), in the context of a ceramic tradition that began in Germany in 1919 at the Bauhaus, the most famous art school in history.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1699757 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-01
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 767 pages

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher
This long-awaited monumental anthology is astonishing in its richness. It was painstakingly brought about through the selfless contributions of dozens of international scholars, artists (many of whom were Wildenhain's students), schools, museums and other institutions. This is a detailed definitive look at the famous Bauhaus school art in relation to the life and work of one of its first students: a smart, young French-born woman named Marguerite Friedlander, now known by her married name of Marguerite Wildenhain.

In time, she was designated a Master Potter, married Bauhaus potter Franz Wildenhain, designed award-winning porcelain pieces, and, after her dismissal as a teacher for being Jewish, left Holland in advance of its invasion by the Nazis. She immigrated to the US, where she joined an artists' community called Pond Farm in the hills above the redwood trees in north California. For much of her remaining life, she ran her own pottery school, taught hundreds of gifted students, and secured her reputation as one of the century's most influential teachers, craftspersons and artists.

From the Author
Conceived and compiled by Dean and Geraldine Schwarz (founders of South Bear Pottery School), this is a vivid, compelling account (both heartrending and delightful) not only of the life and work of an extraordinary artist and teacher, but also of the historical roots of the European concept of Handwerk; the role of pottery at the early Bauhaus; the establishment of Pond Farm by the Herr family; and the continuing, prospering legacy of the Bauhaus pottery tradition in such diverse places as (in Germany) Dornburg and Halle, and (in the US) Decorah, Iowa (South Bear), Fairbanks, Alaska (North Bear), and Spring Green, Wisconsin (Adamah).

About the Author
Dean Schwarz is a potter, painter, teacher, writer and editor who lives and works at South Bear School and Pottery in rural Decorah, Iowa. He was a student and teaching associate of Marguerite Wildenhain. Geraldine Schwarz is a writer and editor who teaches minority literature at the North Iowa Area Community College in Mason City, Iowa. The book was designed by Roy R. Behrens, author of False Colors: Art, Design and Modern Camouflage, a writer and design professor at the University of Northern Iowa, who was also a student at Pond Farm.