Gertrud Arndt self portrait, at the Bauhaus, 1926-27

Berlin salutes female pioneers of The Bauhaus

A retrospective of the school's female creators brings into focus the photographs of Gertud Arndt this month

It's hard to think of a more masculine style of design than the clipped geometry and near-scientific precision of the Bauhaus school. Nevertheless, when Walter Gropius founded the seminal art school in 1919, he insisted that both men and women should attend on an equal footing - a move that predates the coeducational policies of both Oxford and Harvard. While the works of the school's women were never as prominent as those produced by Laszlo Moholy-Nagy or Josef Albers, their works are far from forgotten. Over the past few weeks Berlin's Bauhaus Archive and Museum have been celebrating these women, with a series of shows entitled Female Bauhaus.

 

Carpet by Benita Koch-Otte, 1929
Carpet by Benita Koch-Otte, 1929

These began with a celebration of the work of the textile designer Benita Koch-Otte, who studied and worked at the school from 1920 until its closure 1933; Koch-Otte wove a carpet for Gropius director's office in 1923. This was followed by an exhibition dedicated to the painter Lou Scheper-Berkenkamp, also involved with the school from 1920 until 1933.

 

Holiday Greeting to Maria Rasch by Lou Scheper-Berkenkamp, 1928
Holiday Greeting to Maria Rasch by Lou Scheper-Berkenkamp, 1928

Next month (April 22), the series draws to a close with a Gertrud Arndt exhibition. Arndt, a weaver and photographer,  was with the school between 1923-1931. Though she produced a great deal of weaving and knot-work, Arndt is perhaps best known for her series of inventive, and often masked self portraits, which - as some commentators have observed - predate Cindy Sherman's practice by half a century.

 

Gertrud Arndt self portraits,  1930
Gertrud Arndt self portraits, 1930

In all, it's a stimulating show, and proof that the short-lived, influential school really was as socially progressive as it was graphically innovative. To find out more, go here. For more on another erstwhile student of the great school, consider our Josef Albers book, and for a further understanding of the Bauhaus graphic legacy, take a look at our Archive of Graphic Design, which features 500 designs from the past five hundred years, including a few produced by Gropius's students.