Myth of International Style: 20 - Century Architectural Modernism and Bauhaus Design in Modernisation of Urban Cities
Myth of International Style: 20 - Century Architectural Modernism and Bauhaus Design in Modernisation of Urban Cities
ABSTRACT
This paper considers the key question of how modernist architectural principles behind Bauhaus, Le Corbusier
and American International Style movements are viewed in the context of contemporary architectural designs. By
examining literature and perspectives of scholars, the core principles of architectural modernism will be reframed
in the context of 21st-century vernacularism approaches such as environmental sustainability. This problem
statements if the aesthetics of formalism and rationality of classical International Style architecture can still be
considered “style” for the 21st-century. To understand the subject with regards design structure, forms and
materials, a case study is conducted to compare notable modernist works in urban styles of architecture found in
Tel Aviv and North America. Additionally, the paper questions factors that led to International Style falling out
with contemporary practitioners, and at the same time, how design minimalism enhances understanding of
climate responsive and sustainable architecture. Overall, this analysis finds that 20th-century International Style,
driven by socio-political change movements, machine aesthetics and mass production ethos, expressed through
design movements such as Bauhaus, has started to lose its relevancy to urban architects facing social and
environmental pressures of globalisation, although the universal values presented by Le Corbusier’s 5-Point
Principles are still significant in studying the historical and evolutionary aspects of architectural design.
Finally, research suggests that responsiveness to climate elements continue to signify the gainful lessons of
modernist architecture in going forward into the 21 st-century.
Keywords: modernism, urbanisation, International Style, Bauhaus, Le Corbusier.
heritage in Tel Aviv, the researcher‟s goal is to embellishments, in that sense, International
reframe the historic development of International Style was an appeasement of conservative and
Style architecture through the socio-political progressive value conflicts through bridging
processes of urbanisation, and how this has American vernacularism and European classical
contributed to the creative struggles among architecture [2; 6].
practitioners.
In modernist visions, geometrical layouts of
Significance of Bauhaus Movement housing townships manifest from strict land use
planning regulations. Flat uniformity, seen in
Following the Nazi shutdown of Bauhaus School
the example of the Buffalo News media office
of Art in 1933, Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer,
in New York and the International Trade Mart
Herbert Bayer, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, and
(World Trade Center) in New Orleans, was
others, the leading German educators who brought
designed by preservation-minded architect Edward
fame to the eponymous art school, immigrated to
Durell Stone in the style of New Formalism, to
United States and began practicing in earnest.
disassociate from metal-and-glass works of
It was in the 1932 when the term “International towering mainstream skyscrapers, aiming instead
Style” was born in design fields of architecture for a more “palatable”, eclectic dream of modernist
and various other disciplines [1]. From an aesthetics [7; 8]. International Style further
historical perspective, the Bauhaus design and promoted expressiveness of patented structures by
art school formation is often attributed to direct demonstrating reductive material aesthetics,
threats, suppressions of and encroachments to supporting the exploration of newer, lighter,
socio-political, religious, cultural and social cheaper, pragmatic, less cumbersome construction
freedoms instituted by Adolf Hitler‟s Nazi materials, innovative industrial and automated
powers pre-World War I [2: 4]. techniques [6]. Through the quintessential lens of
major proponents such as MoMA curator (1937-
Finding the heart of a 100-year old art movement in
1941) John McAndrew, the influence of 20th-
the 21st-century involves cross-disciplinary research
century International Style grew into a populist
to uncover fleeting glimpses of the muddied,
movement in the United States, a begotten
evolutionary pathways of art history, art education, triumph for the “New Formalism” approach
cultural and heritage preservation and socio- sans evoking the historicity and socio-politics of
political reconstruction that, ironically, influenced traditional European architecture, expressing in
the growth of anti-Semitism in United States [3]. particular the political activism of German
In attempting to frame an apolitical cultural artists [2; 9; 10].
outlook towards Jews, curators at the New York
Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) Henry Russell McComas [2] asserts that the conscious
Hitchcock and Philip Johnson published a book adoption of an “apolitical soul” in International
after MoMA‟s landmark exhibition Modern Style art and architecture helped foster German-
Architecture in 1932, acclaiming that 20th-century American relations pre-World War 2 until mid-
American International Style symbolised authentic 1950s. In effect, this became an enabler for large-
modernism principles of flexibility, regularity and scale industrial growth globally. In other North
volume expression [4: 14]. Linear symmetry, European regions, International Style bore Fascist
minimal ornamentation and mass-produced expressions through the works of Italy‟s Giuseppe
industrial designs began shaping the era of Terragni [10; 11]. Architect and modernism
commercial clustering business district skyscrapers advocate from the „New York Five‟ Peter
of glass and steel up until World War II. Eisenman wrote a substantial treatise essaying on
Terragni, including Casa del Fascio in the historic
According to Northeastern University School of border town of Como, the headquarters of the
Architecture professor Mardges Bacon [5], the Fascist Party built in between 1932-1936. For
development of American International Style some critics, Eisenman proved the wrongful
can be attributed to architects and industrial art effects of New Formalism when elements of
practitioners‟ foremost admiration for its radical history are removed or disregarded by newer
legitimacy from preceding 19th-century designs, architectural methodology:
but with removal of the European bias [6].
Through sociocultural movements as Bauhaus, (Casa del Fascio is comprised of) dried up
the creative struggles to find a “voice” and compartments, piazzas and ceremonial sites
“vocabulary” to describe the International Style dated to their architectural elements … ignorant
started with removing spatial rigidity and of the fact that in Como, three monuments, the
Tower, the Broletto, the Duomo: three periods, architectural styles [5]. His design inspirations
three revolutionary facts, flank one another and are still exemplary studies of environmental
form the northern side of the Piazza del Duomo sustainability characteristics and cultural interpre-
in a superb ensemble [11: 476]. tations of the commonplace aesthetics found in
the vernacular arts (same as other performance
REVIEW OF LITERATURE arts like music, dance and drama), rather than
Perhaps due to the redolence Mediterranean discourses on technical innovation and the value
associations it evoked, modernism as a radical of built installations.
cultural zeitgeist is sometimes given a reframing Le Corbusier distilled his personal conceptual
treatment as a “superficial” form of style by manifesto in the celebrated essay, “Les Cinq
progressive architectural history critics such as Points de l'architecture moderne” (5 Points of
University of Virginia architectural professor New Architecture), through these principles:
John V. Maciuika [12].
Use of reinforced concrete columns (“les
In an earlier review, Maciuika [13] had theorised on pilotis”) to uplift and bear the load of walls;
the rationalist approaches of pre-Bauhaus architects
like Hermann Muthesius, whose architectural Free and unrestrained flow of interior space
perspectives coincided with the period of the Third for ground plan (“les toits-jardins”) through
Reich, where Nazi political interventions hindered column-and slab rather than partitioning;
social reformations and building designs were Separation of exterior from interior façade
treated as showcases of nationalistic pride and (“le plan libre”) providing unencumbered
German engineering excellence even as social panoramic aesthetics of the surroundings;
class struggles against imperialism grew. Maciuika Horizontal lighting through opening strips or
claims that modernist aesthetics, unlike the purity of ribbon windows (“la fenetre en longueur”)
vernacularism, may even be the “imitation of providing equal lighting while enhancing
artistic sensibilities” [13: 89], rather than actual art landscape visuality; and
itself, historians, acting as guardians of
Roof gardens or terrace (“la facade libre”) in
architecture‟s evolution and heritage, ask if
flat structures, as protection, promenades,
architecture‟s end purpose is to contest dominant
offering light and spatial ventilation to
authoritative views, rather than to promote
replace a building‟s occupied space.
masterful technical competence and material
knowledge and application to improve human The basis of functionalism, according to Le
connections and relationships through expositions Corbusier, was to ennoble human relationships
on functionality, practicality and aesthetics [4; 9; through spaces: “A house is a machine for living
14]. in” [17]. Beatriz Colomina [18] in her narrative
criticism, Privacy and Publicity, notes how Le
Le Corbusier’s Five Points of Modern
Corbusier used architecture as image perspectives
Architecture
to produce “mediated”, subverted cultural forms by
In post-Bauhaus era, Le Corbusier (Charles- portraying seamless spaces where man, material
ÉdouardJeanneret-Gris) and painter Amédée and machine achieve their highest potential for
Ozenfant, assembled their thoughts and responses social progress. By capturing modernity as
to vernacularism, promoting the concept of utopia juxtaposed through photographic (mechanistic)
on earth through “restoration of the living vision, rather than images derived purely from
environment”, in the 28-volume magazine L’Esprit human eyesight and vision, transient emotions and
Nouveau published between 1920-1925 in the dialectics of time would emerge, as such:
France, which had then not encountered the
Architecture (could be defined) the “masterly,
phenomenal effects of the modernisation
correct and magnificent play of masses brought
revolution, nor found aesthetic styles responding
together in light” [19; 20: 4].
to the rapid development of industrial cities and
planned townships [15; 16: 11]. International Style: Philosophy, Form,
Le Corbusier‟s design principles were theoretically History and Legacy
significant for practitioners working in the 20th- In unifying craftsmanship with various branches
century modernist traditions for its attention to of the arts to serve architecture, the
the spirit of human-nature interactions, synthesising industrialisation of developed northern Europe
industrial materials with authentic, vernacular and North America was factored into modernist
elements of organic forms and stripped-down architectural radicalism throughout early to mid-
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Citation: Stephen T.F. Poon, “Myth of International Style: 20th-Century Architectural Modernism and Bauhaus
Design in Modernisation of Urban Cities”, Journal of Fine Arts, 3(3), 2020, pp. 09-19.
Copyright: © 2020 Stephen T.F. Poon. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the
Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in
any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.