Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe year is 1919, the Great War is over, and Dörte Helm becomes part of a group of young artists and revolutionaries who evolve from the Lost to the Golden Generation. The series introduces ... Tout lireThe year is 1919, the Great War is over, and Dörte Helm becomes part of a group of young artists and revolutionaries who evolve from the Lost to the Golden Generation. The series introduces the teachers and students of Bauhaus who inspired our modern lifestyle while telling a sto... Tout lireThe year is 1919, the Great War is over, and Dörte Helm becomes part of a group of young artists and revolutionaries who evolve from the Lost to the Golden Generation. The series introduces the teachers and students of Bauhaus who inspired our modern lifestyle while telling a story of love, betrayal, and the loss of paradise.
- Récompenses
- 2 nominations au total
Histoire
The series covers the first period in the history of the art school and the Bauhaus art movement, the period between 1919 and 1925, when the institution was based in Weimar. Walter Gropius (played by August Diehl) sets up here, with the support of a liberal minister of culture, an institution that aims to represent the progressive and avant-garde currents of German culture, opening it to the rest of the world, while combining artistic and social ideals: life dedicated to creation, art and crafts for the masses, the rejection of rigid conventions and traditions. As it appears in the film, the city of Weimar represents the effervescence but also the social and political contradictions of a war-torn Germany, in which extremisms were fighting each other and in which conservatism tried to limit or even annihilate the avant-garde. This, in turn, was segmented between the followers of expressionism, which had already manifested itself in the decades before the First World War, and the abstract, minimalist, industrialized art promoted by Gropius. Much of the film, however, focuses on the largely unconsumed love story between the school principal and the movement leader and one of his students, Dörte Helm (played by Anna Maria Mühe). She is a minor artist, coming from a conservative family, who will gradually get rid of prejudices and will simultaneously become the opponent and stimulator of the cautious Gropius, but also his muse and his sentimental interest. This connection, probably fictitious, becomes the main focus of the action, and provides the motivation for many of the decisions attributed to Gropius, both as a school principal and as an artist and architect. The story is told through flashbacks, using the pretext of an interview that the architect, who became famous and settled in the United States, gives to the Vanity Fair magazine many decades later. The reporter is more interested in the romantic aspects than in art, design, and architecture, and this interest is also transferred to the narrative structure of the series.
The narrative captures some of the main aspects of Germany immediately after the defeat in World War I, with the contradictions that would lead within the next 14 years to the collapse of democracy and the rise of Nazism. The creative effervescence of the arts and crafts school is also very well captured, as are the difficulties and contradictions between the liberal and the institutionally conservative artistic vision, in aspects such as equal access to courses by women. August Diehl and Anna Maria Mühe play the two main roles excellently, describing a teacher-student relationship that was morally problematic even a century ago, but which acquires significance and is full of emotion in the context of the story. There are many other significant acting roles, but the one I do not want to leave out is Sven Schelker's role as the esoteric professor Johannes Iten, Gropius' deputy in the first period of the Bauhaus. The movement sought to stay out of politics, to become a creative field and a model of artistic and social progress in a conflict-ridden Germany. As an institution, it is clear that it has failed. This can be seen in the series, which covers the first stage of its history, and we know that the school partially changed its direction after Walter Gropius left it in 1928 and closed in 1933, after the Nazis came to power. Its main promoters have emigrated, spread their ideas and created art, crafts and architecture around the world. The style and design survived the school and influenced the architecture and art of the next century. The series 'Bauhaus - A New Era' presents a view of the beginnings of the movement, is well made and beautifully acted and, even if it does not have the rigor of a documentary, it is worth watching.
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