Pannie Choopanya's profile

Project 2B model and scale

My model was inspired by Albers, Josef - Preliminary Course exercises at the Bauhaus (1923-1933). on the topic, a sequence re-ordering the order of materials, shapes and space.
Albers was a working artist in design, typography, photography, painting, printmaking, and poetry and was a student of the Bauhaus in Dessau, Germany. With its reduced geometric outlines, his most important work was in the realm of abstract painting, and it exhibited influences from both the Bauhaus and the Constructivists. As an instructor at Black Mountain College in North Carolina from 1933 to 1949 and Yale University in Connecticut from 1950 to 1958, he influenced many other graphic designers and artists.
To continue discussing and promoting the idea he had created over his career, he and his wife founded the Joseph and Anni Albers Foundation. His work and style link the Bauhaus and Constructivist movements in Europe and the new American art of the 1950s and 1960s. He spent his whole career as a teacher and artist until his death in 1976 at 88.

My initial sketch will focus on the many triangular shapes in the square shape.
I made this model using the white cardboard material I asked for from my mother. I stuck it together with glue and clear tape; it wasn't very stable. So I had to find a helper. This sniffle is white and has a path that runs between the models like a corridor in a building.

The shapes I specify will be squares and triangles, and there is space between the shapes. Its overall shape is a square consisting of a square girl from a rectangle that leans back and forth inside.

REFERENCES

Conservation Research Foundation Museum. (n.d.). Photographs and Material Studies: A Closer Look at Bauhaus: Building the New Artist. http://www.getty.edu/visit/cal/events/ev_2731.html

Design is history. (n.d.). Joseph Albers. http://www.designishistory.com/1940/joseph-albers/
Project 2B model and scale
Published:

Project 2B model and scale

Published:

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