Difference between revisions of "Műhely"

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<onlyinclude>[[Műhely]] (Workshop; or 'little Bauhaus'). [[Sándor Bortnyik]], Hungarian painter and graphic designer, moved to Weimar in 1922 and was connected to the Bauhaus. After he moved back to Hungary he founded a school of applied graphic art in Budapest in 1928, where he followed Bauhaus principles. Tutors: [[Iván Hevesy]] (art history, film), [[Kálmán Kovács]] (stage design), [[Farkas Molnár]] (architecture), [[Pál Ligeti]] ('construction', cultural history), Sándor Bortnyik (painting, graphic design, advertising design). Existed until 1938.</onlyinclude>
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<onlyinclude>[[Műhely]] (Workshop; or 'little Bauhaus'). [[Sándor Bortnyik]], a Hungarian painter and graphic designer, lived in Weimar between 1922 and 1924 where he was in contact with the [[Bauhaus]]. After returning to Hungary in 1925 he founded and directed a private school of for advertising design in Budapest in 1928 with curriculum inspired by the Bauhaus principles. The tutors included [[Iván Hevesy]] (art history, film), [[Kálmán Kovács]] (stage design), [[Farkas Molnár]] (architecture), [[Pál Ligeti]] ('construction', cultural history), and himself (painting, graphic design, advertising design). The school was attended, among others, by [[Victor Vasarely]]; it closed down in 1938.</onlyinclude>
  
Műhely was one of the most interesting Bauhaus satellite schools of the 1930s, when poster design was the only feasible domain of constructivism. One of the students was [[Victor Vasarely]].
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; See also
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* [[Sándor Bortnyik]]
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* [[Hungary#Interwar avant-garde]]
  
See also: [[Sándor Bortnyik]], [[Hungary#Avant-garde]].
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[[Category:Constructivism]]

Latest revision as of 11:19, 7 June 2020

Műhely (Workshop; or 'little Bauhaus'). Sándor Bortnyik, a Hungarian painter and graphic designer, lived in Weimar between 1922 and 1924 where he was in contact with the Bauhaus. After returning to Hungary in 1925 he founded and directed a private school of for advertising design in Budapest in 1928 with curriculum inspired by the Bauhaus principles. The tutors included Iván Hevesy (art history, film), Kálmán Kovács (stage design), Farkas Molnár (architecture), Pál Ligeti ('construction', cultural history), and himself (painting, graphic design, advertising design). The school was attended, among others, by Victor Vasarely; it closed down in 1938.

See also