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Too Cool for School

Modern architecture really kicked off just after 1900's.  Partly a reaction to the ornate and over adorned Victorian and Edwardian buildings; partly due to due new building techniques and materials and partly a political and social revolution.

Some modernist architects were lucky enough to design large pubic buildings, some of them schools.

Here are some seriously cool schools.  Sorry Hollingworth High School, you did not make the cut.

Hunstanton Secondary School by Alison and Peter Smithson

The Bauhaus Dessau by Walter Gropius

ADGB Trade Union School - Hannes Meyer

Haggerston School by Erno Goldfinger

Tubular Times

Marcel Breuer is a designer who can be given the accolade of leading a modernist tubular furniture revolution that dominated 1920/30's design. 

In 1925 he produced this chair, Club Chair (middle).  Drawing on a the designs of the De Stijl furniture by Rietveld but also really taking into account the shape and space of a regular club chair.

  

 

 

Its radical enough for us to look at the leather version in 2014 and see that the other two are seriously cutting edge, but this was 1925 for christ sake!  Really it was a post war period when designers could take advantage of new manmade materials and production techniques.

From then on everyone was at it.  Le Corbusier, Mies van der Rohe, Mart Stam, Charlotte Perriand and Anton Lorenze for Thonet.

     

There was a bit of a legal scuffle when it came to who was responsible for the cantilever design.  A chair with no back legs and one continuous line.  Though Marcel Breuer insisted that he was responsible for this design, it is widely reported that Mart Stam first came up with the idea after making a prototype chair with gas pipes.

      

Whoever is responsible, it's bloody lovely chair and we're lucky enough to have a Thonet version designed by Anton Lorenze in at the moment.

  

  

As well as some other modernist inspired tubular furniture.

      

   

 

Dawn Vachon

Canadian born Dawn is a master of the potters wheel.  Based in Melbourne she sits at her little wheel churning out these beautiful ceramics.  We love the colours and their Memphisey look.

                                      

             

                                        

                                      

                 

Anni & Josef Albers

One of the best known textile artists of the 20th century, Anni Albers truly was the boss.  Studying at the great Walter Gropius' Bauhaus she met and later married the equally talented, Josef Albers.  Anni and Josef had it going on.

              

                                                             ANNI

            

 

                                          

                    

                                                                   JOSEF