Saturday, March 25, 2017
Tuesday, February 21, 2017
Monday, January 30, 2017
Andrew Reach on From Bauhaus | To Black Mountain
“I think you are writing a very important book on the subject of the Bauhaus and Black Mountain College—in a way not touched in academia, as far as I know—inclusive to the interconnections with the Jim Crow South, and shedding light on new territory about African American modernists. I think also your perspective is fresh, in comparison to the usual suspects in mainstream academia who have dominated the subject. On a side note, the cover art you created for this project is beautiful, and connects with the modernity of the Bauhaus and Black Mountain College.”
Andrew Reach
Architect | Artist
Monday, December 19, 2016
Convergence | Divergence | Emergence: A New Conversation on Bauhaus + BMC (Part Two)
By Max Eternity
On a visit to Asheville, North Carolina, last year, I spent time at the Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center. I interviewed Alice Sebrell while there, at which time the museum was exhibiting a show called Convergence | Divergence: Exploring Black Mountain College and Chicago’s New Bauhaus / Institute of Design.
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| Harriet Sohmers Zwerling, The Studies Building, ca. 1949, gelatin silver print. Gift of the artist. |
In Part One of the interview, Sebrell talked about the interconnectedness of the [original] German Bauhaus with Black Mountain College (BMC) and the New Bauhaus, both in the United States. We talked also about how the exhibition came together—the endeavored work of Michael Reid, who curated the show.
Now in the continuation and conclusion of our conversation, Sebrell recalls the preservation effort I led for the Atlanta-Fulton Central Public Library, which was the final building built by Bauhaus alumni, Marcel Breuer. We also talked briefly about some of the art and textiles at the Bauhaus, and at BMC, including works by master weaver, Gunta Stotzl. Thereafter, Sebrell and I talked about the campus buildings at BMC—the first campus and the second campus—and specifically about E. W. Grove, who was the property developer responsible for initially building the BMC site, and other notable sites in the area.
What follows is the end of our recorded conversation and some snapshots of the catalog for Convergence / Divergence: Exploring Black Mountain College Chicago’s New Bauhaus / Institute of Design.
Saturday, December 3, 2016
Conversations: Ruth Erickson, Curator @ ICA Boston, Part Four
Conversations: Ruth Erickson, Curator @ ICA Boston,
Part Four
By Max Eternity
In the final segment of my podcast interview with Ruth
Erickson, the conversation concludes with a discussion about Merce Cunningham. A link to Part One is here, a link to PartTwo is here, and a link to Part Three is here. And below is a Youtube video from a 1966 performance:
Cunningham was born in 1919: the same year that World War One ended and
the same year that the Bauhaus school was opened. Years later, in the summer of 1953 while
teaching at BMC, Cunningham would form the Merce
Cunningham Dance Company.
From the Merce Cunningham Trust:
MERCE CUNNINGHAM (1919-2009) was a leader of the American avant-garde
throughout his seventy year career and is considered one of the most important
choreographers of our time. Through much of his life, he was also one of the
greatest American dancers. With an artistic career distinguished by constant
innovation, Cunningham expanded the frontiers not only of dance, but also of
contemporary visual and performing arts. His collaborations with artistic
innovators from every creative discipline have yielded an unparalleled body of
American dance, music, and visual art.
What follows now is my discussion with Erickson, as we
talk about Cunningham and some of the other important, though lesser known, choreographers
and dancers at BMC:
Sunday, November 20, 2016
Convergence | Divergence | Emergence: A New Conversation on Bauhaus + BMC
Convergence | Divergence | Emergence
A New Conversation on Bauhaus + BMC
By Max Eternity
There are so many things to be
learned about Black Mountain College (BMC)—about how the school came into being
in 1933 and what went on for the 24 years of its existence, as well as studying
the institution’s unrivalled broad appeal to artists and intellectuals of that
era, within the Americas inclusive to African-Americans and ad other minorities, and all
the contributors of Europe.
(NOTE: After returning to California, I decided to redesign all of the websites within the Eternity Group, which is why this interview material is just being published a year later.)
The [original] Bauhaus of
Germany, Staatliches Bauhaus, and the
New Bauhaus of the United States, located in Chicago, Illinois, both had
impacts on BMC. It seems evident, as
well, that the Harlem Renaissance (school) and The New School, both in New York
City, helped to shape BMC.
I first began formal documentation and writing about the Bauhaus |
Black Mountain continuum in 2008, when
I led a campaign to preserve the Atlanta-Fulton Central Public Library from
demolition. Before that time and since my work on the subject(s) has manifested n some form or
another, including channeling some of the creative ideas of that collective
movement into my own art and design.
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| "Color Charm" by Max Eternity. ca. 2006 |
In addition to writing a new book, entitled From Bauhaus | To Black
Mountain, for which this blog is dedicated.
I am also exploring new research for a [proposed] PhD dissertation,
entitled The Agency of Art: War
Pedagogy and Social Change in the Western World - 1915 to 1965, whose
primary research question is:
How did a transcontinental
intersection of Western artists, educators and moralists harness the global
upheaval of the Two World Wars toward achieving high-minded social change between
1915 and 1965, particularly as it relates to the Harlem Renaissance (School),
Staatliches Bauhaus and Black Mountain College?
Here now,
however, is the first podcast segment of an onsite interview I conducted with
Alice Sebrell about an exhibition, entitled
Convergence | Divergence Exploring Black Mountain College and Chicago’s New
Bauhaus / Institute of Design, while I was visiting the East Coast last
year.
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| László Moholy-Nagy, Plexi-Chrome Sculpture, 1947, vintage gelatin silver print, 8.875 x 6.25 inches. Collection of Michael Reid. |
Sebrell is the
program director at the Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center, and in this multi-part interview our conversation starts off with Sebrell saying “we knew there were common faculty members and
students between Bauhaus, Black Mountain and Chicago, but the extent of those intersections and connections we didn’t really know.” The
curator of the show, Michael Reid, was the person, however, who “did tons of
research and made a lot of discoveries that hadn’t really been articulated and
pulled together,” says Sebrell. And she also talks
about the involvement of Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer at BMC:
Tuesday, October 11, 2016
Conversations: Ruth Erickson, Curator @ ICA Boston, Part Three
Peter Voulkos, Rocking Pot, 1956, stoneware with colemanite wash, 13 5⁄8 x 21 x 17 1⁄2 inches. Smithsonian American Art Museum. Gift of the James Renwick Alliance and various donors and museum purchase © Voulkos Family Trust
__________________________________________________________
In Part One of my talk with Ruth Ericson, she explained the layout of the Leap Before You Look exhibition while it was still on display in Southern California. As that show was in its final week, in Part Two of the conversation was published, in which Ericson and I talked some about the architects involved with Black Mountain College, most notably Lawrence Kocher.
The exhibition has since traveled to the Wexner Center
for the Arts (the Wex) at Ohio State University, where it opened on September
17th.
Ruth Asawa, Dancers, c. 1948, oil on blotting
paper 12 x 19 inches. Weverka Family Collection. © Estate of Ruth Asawa. Image
courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
_______________________________________________________
![]() | |||
Jacob Lawrence, Watchmaker, 1946, tempera and graphite on paper, 30 1⁄2 x 21 1⁄2 inches.
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution. Gift of Joseph H. Hirshhorn. Photo by Lee Stalsworth.
© 2015 The Jacob and Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence Foundation, Seattle/Artists Rights Society (ARS)
______________________________________________________
Ericson also talked about Roland Hayes, who taught at BMC in 1945, and who was—according to the Harris Arts Center and other arts institutions—considered “the first African-American classical singer to have an international career on the concert and operatic stage.”
What now follows is a statement by the Wex, and thereafter Part Three of my podcast with Ericson:
This fall, step into an immersive, sweeping exploration of one of America’s most important artistic legacies. Featuring 200 works by 90 artists, Leap Before You Look: Black Mountain College 1933–1957 sheds light on an experimental school in North Carolina that has had an extraordinary impact on contemporary art. Its influence is still profoundly felt today…
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