Peter Behrens | TeoriaDoDesign
Between 1886 and 1889, Peter Behrens platform bed studied at the Kunstgewerbeschule in Hamburg, Kunstschule in Karlsruhe and Dusseldorfer Akademie. From 1890 worked as a painter and graphic designer in Munich, where he was influenced by the Jugendstil movement. During this period produced colored prints, illustrations and bindings in Jugendstil style and in 1893 became a founding member of the Münchner Sezession (Munich Secession), a progressive group of exhibitors artisans. In 1896 he traveled to Italy and a year later joined Hermann Obrist, platform bed August Endell, Bruno Paul, Richard Riemerschmid and Bernhard Pankok to mount the Vereinigte Werkstatten fur Kunst im Handwerk (United Workshops) in Munich, for production use objects platform bed everyday. In 1898 Behrens platform bed worked in the Pan newspaper and designed the first pieces of furniture that were exposed in Glaspalast in Munich the following year. From 1899 to 1903 he was an active member of Darmstadter Kunstler-Kolonie (Cologne platform bed Artists of Darmstadt), which had been initiated by Grand Duke Ernst-Ludwig of Hesse-Darmstadt. In Darmstadt, Behrens designed its first building, the Behrens Haus. This project was conceived platform bed as a Gesamtkunstwerk, in which the furniture and glass were created especially for him. This house marked an important starting point for the removal of Behrens of the Jugendstil and a more rational approach to design. In 1902 and 1903 he taught at Behrens Bayerisches Gewerbemuseum in Nuremberg and exhibited at the "Esposizione Internazionale d'Art Decorative Modern" in Turin. From 1903 to 1907 he was director of Kunstwerbeschule in Dusseldorf. The commercial sense of "Industrial Arts" took the founder of AEG, Emil Rathenau - instigated by Paul Jordan (Director of AEG factories) - the name Peter Behrens Company artistic director in 1907. It was the first time a company employed a designer to advise on all aspects of the design. In this role, Behrens designed homes and factories to the workers, including the factory of AEG turbines, concrete, steel and glass, being one of the first true expression of modern industrial architecture, was enormously influential. Beyond platform bed the architecture, Behrens also designed electrical products, such as kettles, fans and watches, which incorporated in its construction standardized components were interchangeable between products in order to rationalize production methods. Behrens was also responsible for the graphics used by the company and created a strong platform bed and very unified corporate entity for her. Shortly after his appointment to the AEG, Behrens, together with Peter Bruckman, Josef Maria Olbrich, Fritz Schumacher, Richard and Hermann Muthesius Riemerschmid, founded the Deutscher Werkbund in Outobro 1907. (...) One of the first industrial designers, Behrens was the most influential German designer of the twentieth century. Their solutions of simple design, practical platform bed and rational were intensely influential to the formation of Modernism.
"What platform bed is the Industrial Revolution? Peter Behrens' actions Comments RSS Trackback Information Date: 31 October 2009 Tags: AEG, Industrial Design, Deutsche Werkbund Categories: Uncategorized
Archives Select platform bed Month December platform bed 2009 (17) November 2009 (28) October 2009 (3)
Blogroll A3-projectomultimedia Alltimedesign Arcdesigners Buskadesign dick and such Design & CIA Dyzaine EscreverDesign Extendesign Falandodesign platform bed N'joydesign No right! This is an outrage! TeoriaDoDesign
30 years AEG Alvar Aalto Arne Jacobsen Apple Crafts Arts and Crafts Barcelona chair Bauhaus Billy BMW Braun Bruno Munari CAM Breuer Charles Eames Design Citroen 70s Scandinavian Design Graphic Design Industrial Design Deutsche Werkbund Eero Saarinen Dieter Rams Drinklip International Style Functionality George platform bed Nelson Gino Colombini Graffiti Hans Gugelot IKEA Automotive Industry Jeffrey Veen Jesper Just John Ruskin Jonathan Ive Karim Rashid Kartell Kayiwa Le Corbusier Luigi Colani Lathe Manifesto Marianne Brandt Miesrolo Mechanical Mies van der Rohe furniture Otl Aicher Packaging Pantone German Pavilion Peter behrens Philippe Starck Postmodernism Quotes Industrial Revolution Ron Arad Sebastian Brajkovic Street Art Technology Thomas F. Schutte Thonet typography tom peters Tukaani Ulm Uros Vitas Video Walter Gropius Wassily Weimar William Morris
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Between 1886 and 1889, Peter Behrens platform bed studied at the Kunstgewerbeschule in Hamburg, Kunstschule in Karlsruhe and Dusseldorfer Akademie. From 1890 worked as a painter and graphic designer in Munich, where he was influenced by the Jugendstil movement. During this period produced colored prints, illustrations and bindings in Jugendstil style and in 1893 became a founding member of the Münchner Sezession (Munich Secession), a progressive group of exhibitors artisans. In 1896 he traveled to Italy and a year later joined Hermann Obrist, platform bed August Endell, Bruno Paul, Richard Riemerschmid and Bernhard Pankok to mount the Vereinigte Werkstatten fur Kunst im Handwerk (United Workshops) in Munich, for production use objects platform bed everyday. In 1898 Behrens platform bed worked in the Pan newspaper and designed the first pieces of furniture that were exposed in Glaspalast in Munich the following year. From 1899 to 1903 he was an active member of Darmstadter Kunstler-Kolonie (Cologne platform bed Artists of Darmstadt), which had been initiated by Grand Duke Ernst-Ludwig of Hesse-Darmstadt. In Darmstadt, Behrens designed its first building, the Behrens Haus. This project was conceived platform bed as a Gesamtkunstwerk, in which the furniture and glass were created especially for him. This house marked an important starting point for the removal of Behrens of the Jugendstil and a more rational approach to design. In 1902 and 1903 he taught at Behrens Bayerisches Gewerbemuseum in Nuremberg and exhibited at the "Esposizione Internazionale d'Art Decorative Modern" in Turin. From 1903 to 1907 he was director of Kunstwerbeschule in Dusseldorf. The commercial sense of "Industrial Arts" took the founder of AEG, Emil Rathenau - instigated by Paul Jordan (Director of AEG factories) - the name Peter Behrens Company artistic director in 1907. It was the first time a company employed a designer to advise on all aspects of the design. In this role, Behrens designed homes and factories to the workers, including the factory of AEG turbines, concrete, steel and glass, being one of the first true expression of modern industrial architecture, was enormously influential. Beyond platform bed the architecture, Behrens also designed electrical products, such as kettles, fans and watches, which incorporated in its construction standardized components were interchangeable between products in order to rationalize production methods. Behrens was also responsible for the graphics used by the company and created a strong platform bed and very unified corporate entity for her. Shortly after his appointment to the AEG, Behrens, together with Peter Bruckman, Josef Maria Olbrich, Fritz Schumacher, Richard and Hermann Muthesius Riemerschmid, founded the Deutscher Werkbund in Outobro 1907. (...) One of the first industrial designers, Behrens was the most influential German designer of the twentieth century. Their solutions of simple design, practical platform bed and rational were intensely influential to the formation of Modernism.
"What platform bed is the Industrial Revolution? Peter Behrens' actions Comments RSS Trackback Information Date: 31 October 2009 Tags: AEG, Industrial Design, Deutsche Werkbund Categories: Uncategorized
Archives Select platform bed Month December platform bed 2009 (17) November 2009 (28) October 2009 (3)
Blogroll A3-projectomultimedia Alltimedesign Arcdesigners Buskadesign dick and such Design & CIA Dyzaine EscreverDesign Extendesign Falandodesign platform bed N'joydesign No right! This is an outrage! TeoriaDoDesign
30 years AEG Alvar Aalto Arne Jacobsen Apple Crafts Arts and Crafts Barcelona chair Bauhaus Billy BMW Braun Bruno Munari CAM Breuer Charles Eames Design Citroen 70s Scandinavian Design Graphic Design Industrial Design Deutsche Werkbund Eero Saarinen Dieter Rams Drinklip International Style Functionality George platform bed Nelson Gino Colombini Graffiti Hans Gugelot IKEA Automotive Industry Jeffrey Veen Jesper Just John Ruskin Jonathan Ive Karim Rashid Kartell Kayiwa Le Corbusier Luigi Colani Lathe Manifesto Marianne Brandt Miesrolo Mechanical Mies van der Rohe furniture Otl Aicher Packaging Pantone German Pavilion Peter behrens Philippe Starck Postmodernism Quotes Industrial Revolution Ron Arad Sebastian Brajkovic Street Art Technology Thomas F. Schutte Thonet typography tom peters Tukaani Ulm Uros Vitas Video Walter Gropius Wassily Weimar William Morris
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