Bauhaus spirit lives on
The new China Design Museum lifts the curtain on a global celebration of influential German art movement. Wang Kaihao reports from Hangzhou.
The Bauhaus movement was short-lived. The iconic German school of design, craft and fine arts was founded in Weimar in 1919, relocated to Dessau in 1925 and closed in Berlin in 1933. However, its spirit has lived on for generations.
With the centennial celebration of the movement approaching in 2019, a newly opened exhibition in Hangzhou, the capital of Zhejiang province, pays homage to the rich legacies of the German school and has raised the curtain for a global celebration.
The China Design Museum in Hangzhou was inaugurated on the Xiangshan Campus of the China Academy of Art in early April. Bauhaus Imaginista: Moving Away has the privilege of being its major inaugural exhibition.
The museum was designed by Portuguese architect Alvaro Siza, a winner of the Pritzker Prize, the world's top architecture award.
It is described by Hang Jian, deputy director of the CAA, as "China's first museum with a systematic collection of original Western modern design works" and "a rare example in the world of a newly built museum that is specifically dedicated to modern design".
The museum's opening marked the climax of a series of events honoring the 90th birthday of the CAA, one of the major cradles of Chinese artists.
"Imaginista" in the exhibition's title mimics the Latin language to describe the imagination and illumination created by the bold academic experiments in Bauhaus.
Nevertheless, the rare display of original artifacts from not only Bauhaus but also the rest of the world tells people the exhibition is not just about playing with words. Instead, it unrolls a giant picture of how Bauhaus greatly influenced the world's education, industry design, social aesthetics and urban planning in the long term.