Wiener Werkstätte (1903-1932)

GENERAL DESCRIPTION
In the 1890s, progressive European design was defined by concurrent developments of new artistic trends including what was dubbed Art Nouveau (New Art) in France and Belgium, Stile Floreal (Floral Style) in Italy, and Jugendstil (Youth Style) in Germany and Austria. While their stylistic elements differed, one common theme that persisted in all, as well as throughout progressive design theory of much of the 19th century, was the use of stylized natural forms as ornament in a rejection of Greco-Roman classicism. As the world was being transformed by technology, urban living, and societal changes, artists and designers sought new approaches to reflect or, alternately, offer a retreat from this rapidly changing, modern world. These multiple tensions between old and new provided for both unprecedented conflict and creativity at the turn of the 20th century. 

These creative tensions were abundantly evident in Vienna, which by the first decade of the 20th century had become widely recognized as one of the leading centers of progressive artistic and cultural development. In 1897, artist Gustav Klimt and architect Josef Hoffmann, among others, founded the Vienna Secession to provide an alternative vehicle for progressive artists to exhibit their work. Within a new, modern building designed by Joseph Maria Olbrich, the Secession’s efforts provided a polarizing counterpoint to the established academic approach favored by Vienna’s Fine Arts Academy.

In 1903, Hoffmann, along with artist Koloman Moser, founded a collaborative enterprise of artists and designers to provide artistic goods, from architecture to postcards: the Wiener Werkstätte (“Vienna Workshops”). The Werkstätte’s luxurious goods furthered the ideal of a Gesamtkunstwerk, or “total work of art” in which a project’s individual elements were designed as harmonious to its whole—a house in which the furnishings, tableware, fixtures, paintings, sculpture, and other elements reflected reoccurring and complementary motifs. Wealthy, fashionable clients commissioned or purchased these modern objects to reflect their own progressive tastes. The aspirations of the Werkstätte prompted further branches to open in cities including Karlsbad, Zurich, Berlin, and, in 1922, New York City. While its works and their particular approach to ornament presaged the rise of French Moderne design in the 1920s, the later Werkstätte struggled to recapture its earlier artistic relevance and ultimately closed in 1932.

Excerpt from 
Kevin Tucker, DMA unpublished material, “Modern Opulence in Vienna” gallery text, “Jugendstil and the Wiener Werkstätte,” 2014.

NOTES
  • updated rule to include objects (HAB, 4/13/17)

ASSOCIATED CONTENT CHUNKS (list applicable note links)

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS 

IMAGE ASSETS 


This is a photograph of the Wiener Werkstätte design firm in Austria in 1920.
Source: Ingen Uppgift, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License, Wikimedia Commons, accessed July 13, 2016.
UMO: 265936106 ** UMO for review 

EXTERNAL WEB RESOURCES 
Wiener Werkstätte Archive, Austrian Museum of Applied Arts / Contemporary Art~Read about the materials in the Wiener Werkstatte Archive, located in the Austrian Museum of Applied Arts /Contemporary Art in Vienna. 

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS 

TEACHING IDEAS 

RULES
set operator as OR
apply to objects where constituent_id equals 98329
apply to constituents where id equals 98329
apply to constituents with name equals Wiener Werkstätte (Vienna Workshops)
rules_operator
OR
General Description
In the 1890s, progressive European design was defined by concurrent developments of new artistic trends including what was dubbed Art Nouveau (New Art) in France and Belgium, Stile Floreal (Floral Style) in Italy, and Jugendstil (Youth Style) in Germany and Austria. While their stylistic elements differed, one common theme that persisted in all, as well as throughout progressive design theory of much of the 19th century, was the use of stylized natural forms as ornament in a rejection of Greco-Roman classicism. As the world was being transformed by technology, urban living, and societal changes, artists and designers sought new approaches to reflect or, alternately, offer a retreat from this rapidly changing, modern world. These multiple tensions between old and new provided for both unprecedented conflict and creativity at the turn of the 20th century. 

These creative tensions were abundantly evident in Vienna, which by the first decade of the 20th century had become widely recognized as one of the leading centers of progressive artistic and cultural development. In 1897, artist Gustav Klimt and architect Josef Hoffmann, among others, founded the Vienna Secession to provide an alternative vehicle for progressive artists to exhibit their work. Within a new, modern building designed by Joseph Maria Olbrich, the Secession’s efforts provided a polarizing counterpoint to the established academic approach favored by Vienna’s Fine Arts Academy.

In 1903, Hoffmann, along with artist Koloman Moser, founded a collaborative enterprise of artists and designers to provide artistic goods, from architecture to postcards: the Wiener Werkstätte (“Vienna Workshops”). The Werkstätte’s luxurious goods furthered the ideal of a Gesamtkunstwerk, or “total work of art” in which a project’s individual elements were designed as harmonious to its whole—a house in which the furnishings, tableware, fixtures, paintings, sculpture, and other elements reflected reoccurring and complementary motifs. Wealthy, fashionable clients commissioned or purchased these modern objects to reflect their own progressive tastes. The aspirations of the Werkstätte prompted further branches to open in cities including Karlsbad, Zurich, Berlin, and, in 1922, New York City. While its works and their particular approach to ornament presaged the rise of French Moderne design in the 1920s, the later Werkstätte struggled to recapture its earlier artistic relevance and ultimately closed in 1932.

Excerpt from 
Kevin Tucker, DMA unpublished material, “Modern Opulence in Vienna” gallery text, “Jugendstil and the Wiener Werkstätte,” 2014.

Fun Facts
 

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 
Wiener Werkstätte Archive, Austrian Museum of Applied Arts / Contemporary Art~Read about the materials in the Wiener Werkstatte Archive, located in the Austrian Museum of Applied Arts /Contemporary Art in Vienna. 

Notes
  • updated rule to include objects (HAB, 4/13/17)

rules
Apply To
Constituents
id
Equals
98329
tags
#draft
#completed
glass (material): AAT: 300010797
*Decorative Arts and Design
decorative arts: AAT: 300054168
furniture: AAT: 300037680
metalwork: AAT: 300015336
#routed
textiles (visual works): AAT: 300014063
workshops (organizations): AAT: 300026026
nature: AAT: 300179372
@Robinson
Wiener Werkstätte: ULAN: 500268774
Czeschka_Carl Otto: ULAN: 500007692
Vienna (Austria): TGN: 7003321
Art Deco (style or movement): AAT: 300021426
ceramics (object genre): AAT: 300151343
%pictionJP
stylization: AAT: 300055836
Viennese Secession (Vienna Secession/ artists group): ULAN: 500312642
Klimt_Gustav: ULAN: 500030531
Jugendstil: AAT: 300021313
Moser_Kolo: ULAN: 500030689
Hoffmann_Josef: ULAN: 500019177
Olbrich_Josef Maria: ULAN: 500120003
fashion design: AAT: 300138708
Secession Movement (European styles/artists groups): AAT: 300111580
265936106: UMO
source file
artists_and_designers-0273.xml.nores