Thöner
Thöner
Thöner
Wolfgang Thöner
Richard Paulick had experienced the change of course from the Bauhaus
towards “national traditions” when he received a commission for the
sports center on Berlin’s Stalinallee in 1951 and proposed a plan which
drew upon modernist theater designs from the early 1930s, in which one
could see all the characteristics of Philip Johnson and Henry-Russell
Hitchcock’s definition of International Style. In the middle of the project’s
construction, the “Formalism debate” was launched and Paulick had to
adapt the sports center as best he could to the new demands, which
mostly had to do with the entrance way, which was then outfitted with
a frieze and columns.29 Even Richard Paulick now distanced himself from
Bauhaus and proved himself a master in adapting classical models of
space and form. His reconstruction (in truth, a total reinvention) of the
Staatsoper Unter den Linden in the spirit of Knobelsdorff is seen even
today as a model, and was followed up with many similar projects.
Having studied Erdmannsdorff in Dessau, he adapted such forms to the
post-1945 experiments with industrialized methods of construction.30
Despite the “struggle over national traditions,” there was also some-
thing of a “subliminal” fight to gain recognition for the Bauhaus. This was
clear even with building projects realized in this period, in their subtle
references to corresponding concepts. An example is the Rundfunkge-
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Figure 4. Cover of a 1965 textbook, Bauwerke und Baustile von der
Antike bis zur Gegenwart: Lehrbuch für die Kunstbetrachtung in der
zehnten Klasse der erweiterten Oberschule. The black-and-white photo-
graph next to the illustration of the Bauhaus building shows the Haus
des Lehrers (Hermann Henselmann, 1964) in Berlin, which signaled the
return of the formal language of modernism to official GDR architec-
ture, here enriched by a Mexican-inspired mural.
remark that was not meant as a compliment. Rykwert wrote, “The cata-
log, if not the exhibit itself, wants to awaken our admiration for a seem-
ingly repulsive Hilberseimer-like building, the East German residential
complex of the Halle-Neustadt collective; to be sure, this is presented as
a splendid example of a work method and not as an architectural achieve-
ment, but God save us from work methods, even if they are collective,
that lead to such results.”49 The criticism referred to something which
intensified after 1971, when the state declared its goal of eliminating the
housing problem: construction with a small number of prefabricated
forms. The increasing crisis in the GDR economy (1970 was the height of
the crisis) did not allow for other options. The profession of “architect”
was reduced to that of “complex project designer.” In a state-industry
system oriented towards short-term efficiency, young architects hardly
had an opportunity to achieve a certain level of proficiency. In the GDR,
the era of “master architects” and great names in architecture was over.50
It seems paradoxical that it was precisely in this moment that the
Bauhaus once again became an official subject for discussion in the GDR.
The encounter with the Bauhaus remained essentially theoretical and
could not give any real inspiration to the reality of building in the GDR,
which was defined by a very different set of premises. In this phase, the
Bauhaus (and, with it, Functionalism, which had been demonized since
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Figure 7. Cover of Lothar Kühne, Gegenstand und Raum (1981). Note
how the ideal merging of Communism and Functionalism is visual-
ized.
Notes
1
Lothar Kühne, “Zum Begriff und zur Methode der Erforschung der Lebensweise,” Wei-
marer Beiträge 8 (1978):8.
2
Werner Oechslin, “Mainstream-Internationalismus oder der verlorene Kontext,” in Die
Architektur, die Tradition und der Ort: Regionalismen in der europäischen Stadt, ed. Vittorio
Magnago Lampugnani (Stuttgart, 2000), 98.
3
Regina Bittner, “Der Bauhaus als Lebensstil?,” in Bauhausstil: Zwischen International Style
and Lifestyle, ed. Regina Bittner (Berlin, 2003), 26–37.
4
Hans-Joachim Dahms, “1929—CIAM-Kongress: die Wohnung für das Existenzminimum:
Verwissenschaftlichung und Formverzicht,” in Bauhausstil, ed. Regina Bittner, 86–107.
5
Simone Hain, “’Von der Geschichte beauftragt, Zeichen zu setzen’: Zum Monumental-
itätsverständnis in der DDR am Beispiel der Gestaltung der Hauptstadt Berlin,” in Macht
und Monument, Moderne Architektur in Deutschland 1900 bis 2000, eds., Romana Schneider
and Wilfried Wang (Stuttgart, 1997), 189.
6
Heinrich Klotz, Conversations with Architects (New York, 1972).
7
Winfried Nerdinger, ed., Bauhaus-Moderne im Nationalsozialismus: Zwischen Anbiederung
und Verfolgung (Munich, 1993); Walter Prigge, ed., Ernst Neufert: Normierte Baukultur im 20.
Jahrhundret (Frankfurt/Main, 1999).
8
Werner Durth, Deutsche Architekten: Biographische Verflechtungen 1900–1970 (Stuttgart,
2001).
9
Klaus-Jürgen Winkler, “Bemerkungen zur Bauhausrezeption an der Weimarer Hochschule
unmittelbar nach dem Krieg,” Wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift der Hochschule für Architektur und
Bauwesen Weimar 38 (1992) A:5/6:277–86.