oskar body as weapon

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1 Oskar Schlemmer: Body as Weapon Beau Rhee Department of Dance Barnard College, Columbia University Spring 2007

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    Oskar Sch lemmer: Body as Weapon

    Beau Rhee Department of Dance

    Barnard College, Columbia University Spring 2007

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    Abst ract We need number, measure, and law as armor and as a weapon, lest we be swallowed up by chaos.1 To understand the essence of der Bau, creative construction. Like the concept of Bau itself, the stage is an orchestral complex which comes about only through the cooperation of many forces.2

    In the summer of 1928, the Bauhaus School in Dessau, Germany offered a course

    entitled Human, or Mensch taught by Oskar Schlemmer. Often considered one of the

    most influential art schools of the twentieth century, the Bauhaus flourished between 1919

    and 1933. Pedagogically, artistically, and theoretically, the Bauhaus was a powerhouse

    that produced and exported new modernist ideas about art, industry, architecture, theater,

    and design. Here, Oskar Schlemmer taught the Human course, which combined

    visual, biological, and philosophical studies to create a full understanding of the man as a

    social, bodily, and spiritual being.3 Within the framework of Bauhaus pedagogy, the

    existence of this class within the curriculum demonstrates the importance placed on the

    human body. The artist and teacher most dedicated to this idea was Oskar Schlemmer. A

    multifaceted artist and teacher who made paintings, sculptures, dances, and theater sets,

    he centered his work around the human body and its interaction with the world. His

    1 Oskar Schlemmer, Perspektiven address, quoted in Karin von Maur, The Art of Oskar

    Schlemmer, in Oskar Schlemmer, ed. Arnold Lehman and Brenda Richardson, (Baltimore: The Baltimore Art Museum, 1980) p. 120.

    2 Oskar Schlemmer, Theater (Bhne), in Theater of the Bauhaus, ed. Walter Gropius and Arthur Wensinger (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996), p. 81.

    3 Oskar Schlemmer, Man: the Teaching Notes from the Bauhaus (Cambridge: M.I.T Press, 1972), p. 20.

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    closest companion and wife, Helena Tutien Tut Schlemmer, explains that the

    guiding concept of his life was the idea: man within space.4 His paradigm of the

    body is evident not only in his Mensch curriculum but also in his essays Man and the

    Art Figureand Theater, as well as in his Bauhaus Dances, works that can be

    thought of as distilled crystallizations of his work at the Bauhaus from 1921 to 1930.

    Schlemmers dance-theater works reveal that his project was to create a new, modern

    understanding of the human body. His views on the body are inherently paradoxical:

    radically abstract yet deeply humane, intensely simplified yet subtly complex. He

    emerges as an artist deeply influenced by early modernist concerns, yet also immensely

    dedicated to finding timeless, universal forms that eloquently expressed the

    contemporary human condition. A historically informed and visually specific analysis of

    his choreographic and theoretical work at the Bauhaus offers an understanding of his

    unified, ordered, and profound allegory of the modern human body that transcended the

    chaos of the modern era. The allegory of the human body is ultimately one of identity.

    4 Tut Schlemmer, ed., Letters and Diaries of Oskar Schlemmer (Middletown: Wesleyan University

    Press, 1972), p. xii.

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    Background

    The dates of Schlemmers birth and death give us a brief glimpse of the range of

    experiences that must have filled his life. Born in 1888, his life spanned one of the most

    rapidly modernizing periods in European history. From 1914 to 1943, the year he died, he

    lived through World War I, the Weimar Republic, and the first four years of World War II.

    The rapid and chaotic modernization that took place doing his lifetime coincided with the

    development of major artistic and intellectual movements. At a young age, shortly after

    both his parents passed away, Oskar Schlemmer made a living for himself as an artisan,

    working as a design craftsman in a wood-inlay factory.5 Because of his excellent work, he

    received a scholarship at the Stuttgart Akademie der Bildenden Kunst (Stuttgart Academy

    of the Plastic Arts), where he studied from 1906 to 1911.6 He developed an extremely

    important and influential relationship with his teacher Adolf Hlzel, a painter linked to the

    German Werkbund and the head of the Stuttgart Akademie. Hlzels theoretically rich

    Werkbund philosophy concerning the aestheticization of the objects of everyday modern

    life greatly influenced Schlemmer, giving him an early exposure to deeply theoretically

    grounded art practices.7 He was one of Holzels star students; Oskar Schlemmer and

    Willi Baumeister painted the murals for the main pavilion of the Cologne Werkbund

    5 Oskar Schlemmer, ed. Arnold Lehman and Brenda Richardson, (Baltimore: The Baltimore Art

    Museum, 1980) p. 195. 6 Letters and Diaries of Oskar Schlemmer, p. 3. 7 Vernon Lidtke, Twentieth Century Germany, in Oskar Schlemmer, ed. Arnold Lehman and

    Brenda Richardson (Baltimore: The Baltimore Museum of Art, 1986), p. 29.

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    exhibition. The ideas of the German Werkbund involved, above all, a search for a unique

    German style in terms of design aesthetic and theory in direct relationship with the rapid

    industrialization of Germany at the turn of the twentieth century. Founded in 1907, the

    Werkbund aspired to a cooperation of art, industry and crafts in the ennoblement of

    commercial activity by means of education, propaganda, and a united stand on pertinent

    questions.8 This cooperation must have been one of the foundational ideas that

    Schlemmer encountered with Hlzel; an instance of early modernist thinking that

    undoubtedly influenced his own practices. After studying at the Akademie, Schlemmer

    founded the Neckarstrae Gallery, which was the first gallery to exhibit modern Cubist

    paintings in Stuttgart, an early display of the dedication to Modernism that continued

    throughout his life.9

    From 1914 to 1918, he served in World War I. He served briefly in the field as a

    soldier, but worked mainly as a mapmaker. He does not seem to have had a terribly

    disturbing war experience. In a letter to his closest friend, Otto Meyer, he humorously

    wrote of his mapmaking work (which involved aerial photography): I hope that

    something positive comes of all these negatives. 10 Although serving in the war no

    doubt came with dark encounters, his mapmaking job gave him much time and freedom;

    his journals are rich with entries on art movements throughout Europe (Futurism, Cubism,

    8 Heinrich Waentig: Wirtscahft und Kunst, (Jena, 1909) p.47 quoted in Magdalena Droste, Bauhaus, (New York: Taschen, 2005) p. 12.

    9 Tut Schlemmer, Letters and Diaries of Oskar Schlemmer, p. 5. 10 Letters and Diaries of Oskar Schlemmer, p. 60

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    Dada) and on his own artistic identity and development.

    In 1921, Schlemmer met Walter Gropius, the architect who was head of the

    Bauhaus at the time, who hired him as a Master of Form of the Bauhaus, Weimar in 1921.

    Schlemmer was joined that same year at the Bauhaus by Paul Klee. Although the

    Bauhaus moved twice, once to Dessau in 1925 and to Berlin in 1930, Schlemmer

    remained at the school until early 1930, when it came under attack from the increasingly

    vociferous Nazis; three years later, it closed down in 1933.11 His most productive years

    as an artist coincided with his career at the Bauhaus. Furthermore, his personal life

    bloomed at the institution. He and Tut Schlemmer had three children there, and enjoyed a

    rich social life surrounded by other Bauhaus families. Schlemmer was, after all, the

    official party planner of the Bauhaus, planning some ingenious parties such as Silent

    Night (where the rule of the party was to communicate by gesture and not words).

    Although life was not monetarily plentiful at the Bauhaus, it was certainly intellectually and

    emotionally satisfying for Schlemmer. Beginning in 1933, when Hitler came to power,

    Schlemmer found it impossible to support himself and his family with his artwork alone

    and struggled to find odd teaching and painting jobs. He died in Stuttgart in 1943.

    To understand Schlemmers work, one must explore the world of the Bauhaus,

    which existed from 1919 to 1933.Bauhausmeans House of Construction in

    11 Man and Mask, prod. and dir. Gottfried Just, 40 min., Bavaria Atelier GMBH Production , 1968,

    videocassette.

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    German. Based on the structure of Medieval communities where artisans lived and

    worked together, the Bauhaus was conceived as a school that aimed to dissolve the

    sharp line between artist and craftsman so that a whole range of artistic media would

    exist together in unity. Walter Gropius, the author of the Bauhaus manifesto and the

    founder of the school, famously stated that the Bauhaus community would work without

    a retreat into the ivory tower, and look for a new synthesis of art and modern

    technology.12 This progressive and ambitious institution gathered together artists/

    teachers of many different movements; indeed, Kandinsky (a Transcendentalist) taught

    painting; Laszlo Moholy-Nagy innovative photography and photomontage; Paul Klee color

    and form classes; Marcel Breuer design, while de Stijl artist Theo van Doesburg played

    an integral role in determining the course program.13 Unlike Paris, Weimar was a small

    provincial city, so this kind of internationalism shows the appeal of Gropius ideas to a

    wide range of artists, as well as the social and artistic openness of the Bauhaus. A very

    early member of this community, Schlemmer was able to pursue his vision of a new

    painting and a new theater through the intellectual and material resources of the Bauhaus.

    The politics of the Bauhaus were decidedly left-wing and Socialist. The idea of

    community that permeated Bauhaus art and life can be seen from its founding manifesto

    written by Gropius. Let us together create the new building of the future, which will be

    12 Walter Gropius, Introduction,in Theater of the Bauhaus, ed. Walter Gropius and Arthur

    Wensinger (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996), p. 7. 13 Kenneth Frampton, Modern Architecture (London: Thames and Hudson, 2004), p. 123-124.

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    everything in one form. Architecture and sculpture and painting.14 In this manifesto,

    building is not only an artistic and intellectual activity, but also a social one. Building

    leveled the traditional distinction between bourgeois artist and proletarian worker and

    united them under a new concept and activity. The Bauhaus hierarchy of apprentice and

    master (student and teacher) reveals the sociological connections to the Medieval guilds

    on which Gropius modeled the school. Furthermore, the social structure of the Bauhaus,

    within the context of prevailing German cultural norms, which emphasized democratic

    rather than hierarchical relationships, marks the school as a type of social experiment.

    Schlemmer, though much more interested in intellectual and artistic endeavors

    than political ones, was clearly aligned with the left in politics. In college he participated

    in Socialist demonstrations; he supported a leveling of class structures and admired the

    Russians for their revolution in 1917.15 The German revolution [is] a pale imitation of the

    Russian; we shall be lucky to get a measly democracy , he writes on January 25,

    1919.16 One can find these socialist ideas in Bauhaus aesthetic philosophies; thus,

    Schlemmers ideas and works must also be understood in the context of this leftist

    political stance. Much of his work is imbued with a knowledge of Socialist ideas of

    community as well as a knowledge of post-revolutionary ideas and art, such as

    Constructivism.

    14 Walter Gropius, Bauhaus Manifesto, quoted in Magdalena Droste, Bauhaus (New York: Taschen, 2005) p. 10.

    15 Letters and Diaries of Oskar Schlemmer, p. 65 16 Ibid.

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    Gropius appointed Schlemmer as the director of the sculpture and mural studios

    in 1921.17 Schlemmer initially worked on experimental theater with Lothar Schreyer, who

    was the first director of the stage workshop, but later become the director of the Bauhaus

    stage in 1923.18 His important and early work, The Triadic Ballet was conceived and

    choreographed from 1918 to 1921, and premiered at the Stuttgart Landestheater in

    1922.19 The Bauhaus Dances, choreographed between 1923 and 1928, are more

    representative of the artistic and theoretical work that would occupy him while teaching at

    the Bauhaus.20 A series of short dances consisting mainly of solos, duets, and trios, The

    Bauhaus Dances are named simply, with titles such as Gesture Dance, Hoop Dance, Pole

    Dance, and Space Dance. Although Schlemmer remained a painter throughout his life,

    dance was a medium that allowed him to explore his primary theoretical and artistic

    interest: the human figure. Furthermore, dance seems to have marked an artistic

    progression from the two dimensional medium of painting to a more spatially oriented

    practice. In a letter to his great friend Otto Meyer, written from a battlefield in February

    1918, Schlemmer states: I certainly see great possibilities in the realm of ballet and

    pantomime I believe this independent branch of the theatrical arts will provide the

    17 Letters and Diaries of Oskar Schlemmer, p. 93. 18 Ibid. 19 Ibid. 20 Debra McCall, Reconstructing Schlemmers Bauhaus Dances, in Oskar Schlemmer, ed.

    Arnold Lehman and Brenda Richardson (Baltimore: Baltimore Museum of Art, 1986), p. 150.

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    impetus for a renewal.21 Schlemmer was not a trained ballet dancer, nor was he

    particularly interested in dance as a young man, but this newfound interest quickly

    bloomed into a life of its own, and by 1927, he joined Rudolf Laban at the Magdeburg

    Dance Congress.22 From the years 1923 onward, he also began to write and lecture more

    about dance and theater. Essays such as Man and the Art Figure (Kunstfigur) and

    Theater (Bhne) are examples of how he continually tried to theorize his developing

    choreographic ideas. As Schlemmers work matured with time, his visions formed a

    choreographic vocabulary that existed as a theatrical embodiment of Bauhaus concerns.

    More importantly, though, his choreographic language also signified Schlemmers ideas

    about his understanding of the human body as a vessel to creating a modern allegory of

    human identity.

    21 Letters and Diaries of Oskar Schlemmer, p. 49. 22 McCall, Reconstructing Schlemmers Bauhaus Dances, p.150.

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    The Bauhaus Dances : Form and Con ten t

    In the spirit of keeping the art at the center of study, I would like to first examine

    Schlemmers The Bauhaus Dances. This set of short dances was choreographed between

    1923 and 1928, and performed at the Bauhaus theaters. The Bauhaus Dances best exemplify a

    unique dark humor that Schlemmer employed to illuminate certain aspects of the modern human

    condition. This humor in the choreography is a strategy that is both socially and politically

    pointed. The critical responses to The Bauhaus Dances, though, rarely comment on this aspect

    of Schlemmers work. I aim to provide a re-interpretation of The Bauhaus Dances by focusing

    on the trios.

    The Bauhaus Dances refers to the group of dances Schlemmer choreographed while

    teaching the Bauhaus Theater Workshop from years 1923 to 1929. The main known dances

    among these are nine dances comprised of four solos, four trios, and one chorus piece that were

    reconstructed by Debra McCall and Andreas Weininger in 1982, as well as by Albert Flocon,

    Ludwig Grote, Tut Schlemmer, and Hannes Winkler in 1968. This earlier reconstruction was

    made into the video Man and Mask, which is the basis of all visual analysis in this paper.

    Although his Triadic Ballet is the most well known and more often reconstructed work, The

    Bauhaus Dances are his later, more distilled works that best reflect his theories and work at the

    Bauhaus Theater Workshop.

    Walter Gropius thought of closing down this department for financial reasons, but

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    Schlemmer protested loudly against this decision, and in 1927 the theater reappeared officially

    on the Bauhaus Dessau campus roster of classes.23 Schlemmer worked intensively with the

    students who took Theater classes from 1927 to 1929. Some of the students he worked with were

    Lux Feininger, Andreas Weininger, Werner Siedhoff, Walter Kaminsky, Manda von Kreibig, and

    Karla Grosch. Although none were trained in ballet from an early age, the Bauhaus offered

    gymnastics and movement classes that the theater students were strongly encouraged to take.

    In 1929, this group of Theater Workshop students and Schlemmer made a tour of Germany and

    Switzerland, receiving a large amount of success and attention. When Hannes Meyer took over

    Walter Gropius position, however, the budget for theater was reduced. Schlemmer had to give

    up his elaborate costumes and sets and the students formed an extremely political, Piscatorian

    theater called The Young Group which was heavily inspired by Soviet theater and minimally by

    Schlemmers work.24

    What seems particularly alarming about the reception of Debra McCalls 1982

    reconstruction of Schlemmers Bauhaus Dances in the United States is the flat consensus on

    the abstraction and metaphysical qualities of Schlemmers theater that seems to drain the

    cultural importance of Schlemmers work. In a New York Times review on October 31, 1982,

    Anna Kisselgoff does little more than situate Schlemmer within a rather uninteresting gloss of the

    Bauhaus and suggests that it would be useful to see the metaphysical dimension behind

    23 Magdalene Droste, Bauhaus p. 158 24 Magdalene Droste, Bauhaus p. 186.

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    Schlemmer's own abstract dance theater.25 D.S. Moyinans article on the Bauhaus Dances

    published in the Autumn 1984 issue of The Drama Review also disappointingly does little more

    than quote McCall and describe her reconstruction process, rather than offering any historical or

    thematic interpretation of the work. An article by Susanne Lahusen published in Dance Research

    in Autumn 1986 concludes rather anticlimactically with this point: Schlemmer had sensed that

    his abstract style was too avant-garde for the dance world of his time.26 If Lahusen had

    considered that Nijinskys The Rite of Spring and Malevichs Victory Over the Sun both

    premiered in 1913, or that The Tradic Ballet premiered in 1922, she would have understood that

    The Bauhaus Dances were in no way abstract works that sprung out of the blue, but were

    developed from well established modernist ideas about the body and theater. McCall gives a

    slightly more sophisticated reading of his work when she speaks of the spirit of play,

    playfulness of the characters. Theyre like big adult-sized puppets. Each of them has character

    and temperament.27

    What takes the Bauhaus Dances beyond the level of conceptual visual play with abstract

    forms is the level at which Schlemmer engages with a dark humor that creates a space that is at

    once orderly but inexplicably dangerous, a dark humor that brings to life characters that seem to

    25 Anna Kisselgoff, They Created Dance Works at the Bauhaus, too The New York Times. October 31, 1982.

    26 Susanne Lahusen. Oskar Schlemmer: Mechanical Ballets? Dance Research: The Journal of

    the Society for Dance Research, Vol. 4, No. 2. (Autumn, 1986), p. 76. 27 D. S. Moynihan. Oskar Schlemmers Bauhaus Dances: Debra McCalls Reconstructions

    The Drama Review: TDR, Vol. 28, No. 3, Reconstruction. (Autumn, 1984). p. 51.

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    hide behind puffy protective costumes and beautiful (but often frightening) masks. I argue that

    abstraction of the body is merely a means to create a body of works that point to the vulnerability

    of the modern human condition. Although the Bauhaus Dances do have solos, the longer three-

    minute pieces are always trios. Rather than exploring themes of an individual man finding his

    identity, or a relationship between two people, Schlemmer chooses a number that he believes

    implies the collective, or the larger social matrix. When asked why he named his longer work The

    Triadic Ballet, Schlemmer explained: Because three is a supremely important, prominent

    number, within which egotistic one and dualistic contrast are transcended, giving way to the

    collective (July 5, 1926).28 It is within this collective, then, that Schlemmers humor operates

    at its most incisive and critical level.

    The costumes most frequently worn in The Bauhaus Dances are padded uniforms that

    hide the natural contour of the individual body and make each dancer appear as though the

    body were a prototype. According to Andreas Weininger and Lux Feininger, the costumes were

    made of colored linen and quilting.29 Usually, dancers are differentiated by different colored

    costumes. The curved shape of the unitard makes it impossibly to differentiate the gender of the

    performers. These curved prototypes of bodies are found in Schlemmers painting as well. On

    canvas, his figures (regardless of gender) have bulging chests and hips; often the only

    differentiation from one figure to the other is found in the hairstyle or clothing. For the most part,

    28 Letters and Diaries of Oskar Schlemmer, p. 196. 29 Moynihan, D.S. Oskar Schlemmers Bauhaus Dances: Debra McCalls Reconstruction, p

    55.

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    the nude figure remains a set of distilled, curved, non-gendered forms. Most importantly, on

    stage, the element of padding both humorously and ominously functions as a protective layer

    from the outside world. Clothing functions in society as a both functional and cultural item. On

    stage, however, costumes take on a mostly aesthetic role, beyond the need to allow movement.

    It is a darkly humorous statement when a costume functions primarily as a protective layer; it

    signals that the space outside of the body present both physical and psychological danger.

    Schlemmers constumes were directly inspired by Russian Constructivist clothing experiments

    and costumes. Because of Schlemmers admiration of the Russians as well as the influence of

    Constructivism on Bauhaus thinking, it is extremely likely that Constructivism influenced his

    costume choices. The aesthetic of Schlemmers padded body suits matches the unitard suits

    or prozhodezha worksuits that the Constructivists wore, originally designed by Varvara

    Stepanova for Rodchenko.30

    Schlemmers masks are also important to consider, especially when determining the

    type of subjectivity the performer on stage is projecting. As the costumes do to the body,

    Schlemmers masks reduce individual features from the human face and make the face of the

    performer appear as a type. Rather than, as in the tradition of European theater and opera,

    which conveys the persona of an individual character, Schlemmer explores the possibility of an

    establishment of a type of figure that could serve as a metaphor for a broad range of people. In

    30 Christine Lodder, Russian Constructivism (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983) p. 212.

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    this case, Schlemmers knowledge of non-European theater traditions significantly influenced

    his emphasis on the type over the individual; he states that his modelscan be found in the

    Javanese, the Japanese, and the Chinese theater, rather than in the European theater of

    today.31

    In terms of movement, Schlemmer often employs humor as a way to comment critically

    on the social and political conditions of his time, with different emphases and concerns

    according to each dance. The extreme seriality of Schlemmers costumes and the seemingly

    restricted movement all function as results of Schlemmers attempt to show an ever more

    frightening and controlling society where human weakness, deception, violence is augmented by

    the outside world. The relevance the themes Schlemmer addressed with his Bauhaus Dances

    have to our own society is surprising and incisive. Among the five trios, I will be discussing four

    dances: Space Dance, Gesture Dance, Game of Bricks, and Flats Dance.

    The cues in Space Dance, given to the red dancer by the blue dancers forty-five

    degree rotation, begins a sequence in which this forty-five degree rotation by one dancer cues

    another dancer into movement. This cue is the center around which the dancers relationships

    twist and turn; the sequence of fifteen cues that constitute this dance creates extremely

    interesting timing sequences that play with the different speeds in which each of the dancers

    move. For example, at one moment, the red dancer gives the cue for both yellow and blue to

    31 Oskar Schlemmer, Theater (Bhne), in Theater of the Bauhaus, ed. Walter Gropius and Arthur

    Wensinger (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996) p. 101.

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    move; because yellow moves about three times faster than blue, yellow ends up traversing three

    times as much space. Yellow takes interesting diagonal patterns while the blue dancer plods on

    a straight line. Through speed and patterning, Schlemmer is able to use contrast and humor in

    his work. One extremely interesting moment is towards the end, when a cue creates a

    dangerously close collision between the three moving bodies, but the respective speeds in

    which they move stops the possible collision or contact. This moment is at once eminently

    dangerous but also very humorous, as it seems as though the whole system of the cue that the

    piece rests on will ultimately fail; however, the feeling of suspense is overcome by a prevailing

    calm. This moment that almost breaks the calm that Schlemmer sets up is both humorous and

    critical. This humor is dependent on a tension between a greater order maintaining its structure

    and the possibility of its complete demise. Furthermore, this moment calls to attention the

    disconnect between the dancers on stage; this greater order seems one that unites the dancers

    together in terms of their tasks, but separates them in terms of human contact.

    Gesture Dance is another trio, with three characters who wear separate colors-

    yellow, blue, and red. Yellow opens the piece, striding aggressively on stage from stage right.

    After hopping around his seat, he sits. Then Red enters from the upstage right, walking a little

    slower, but with purpose. He does four grand battements around his seat, then sits down.

    Strangely enough, then Blue enters from stage left, dragging his body with his arms in a push up

    position and then hops in front of his bench. At this moment, all three make a strange zzzzz

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    noise and sit down in unison. Then begins a contorted, strange conversation. Yellow speaks in a

    hysterically high whisper to Red, behind a secretive hand. Both burst out laughing, hitting their

    hands on the ground and throwing their heads back to express their glee. They look at each

    other, and rub their hands together as though plotting some sort of scheme. Red leans over and

    then tells something to Blue. Upon hearing what Red says, both Red and Blue sway in laughter,

    then their laughter escalates until they laugh in a violently percussive rhythm while bouncing on

    their chairs. When the laughter stops, the three get up and swirl together in movement. A whistle

    blows from afar; they separate and walk for a while in a circle. Then, Yellow signals for the other

    two to stop. They stop, and the three link hands, and perform a fairly cheerful maypole dance.

    Then, they go off as they came in, Red and Yellow exit stage right, and Blue to stage left.

    This piece functions as a comment on the secrecy and unreliability of human

    communication, especially those conversations that build power structures or hierarchies

    between people. Communication never happens within this collective; rather, it is a decree that

    unites these three in movement, whether it is the whistle or Yellows gesture. By the end of the

    piece, it is Yellow who holds the power over Red and Blue. One could read this as a piece that

    shows how one person can essentially construct his own power over a group of people. This is,

    of course, a frightening and incisive insight- probably coming from Schlemmers experience

    with the chaos and corruption of Weimar Republic politics.

    Already, an analysis of Schlemmers two trios show that he was not an aesthete

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    concerned only with making beautiful abstract forms. Behind what seems only playful and

    inpenetrable mechanical gestures, there is a certain severity and alarming seriousness. The two

    other trios, Game of Bricks and Flats Dance also address issues of identity and power

    construction.

    Game of Bricks is an architectural piece; one can almost imagine the architecturally

    inclined faculty at the Bauhaus viewing the piece with great glee. In a way, this piece seems to

    presuppose Judson Dance Theaters task-oriented performances. The main action involves the

    three dancers arranging large cubes in various arrangements. Each of the cubes six sides are

    painted red, yellow, blue, white, black, and grey. The piece opens with all three primary colors of

    the cubes equally displayed. Throughout the beginning of the piece, though, the number of

    cubes corresponding to each character seems to signify the amount of control or power that

    character has. The title Game of Bricks could be seen as a metaphor for how construction and

    architecture is a domain (or game) of control. The conflict occurs when Yellow and Blue decide

    to collaborate and build a structure together. They attempt to coalesce Red to give them more

    cubes to assist them in building their structure. However, Red refuses to conform and

    surprisingly, Red ends up ordering the other two around. Reds movements are brave and

    charismatic. Under Reds control, the three build a pyramidal structure, which they push to

    rotate when completed. The rotation shows the audience that the structure represents all three

    colors equally! The piece seems a hopeful comment on leadership- that when the right person

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    holds power over a group of people, a collective can make a beautiful and equally

    representative structure.

    Flats Dance is perhaps the darkest of the five trios. Rather than wear different

    colored costumes, three dancers wear grey padded costumes and wear white gloves and white

    masks. The masks are flat and have holes as eyes and a line for a mouth. The audience does not

    see the bodies of the dancers until the end; in the beginning all one sees of the bodies are the

    hands, feet, and masks of the dancer floating around the colored planes. The field of movement

    is on a plane just as flat as the masks the dancers wear. They hide behind the red, yellow, and

    blue planes, playing a game of hide and seek. Individuality has been wiped out- the shifting and

    oscillating planes comprise a beautiful visual puzzle. At the end, the game of hide and seek is

    over, and the three grey bodies reveal themselves. At this moment, the dancer on stage left

    shoots the one who stands center. This dancer falls, and the dancer stage right catches the

    fallen body. The sheer unexpected violence after the neutrality and abstraction of the shifting

    colored planes is shocking. This is a comment on the danger of revealing identity in a society

    where people remain hidden behind identically reproduced masks, a society in which revealing

    who you are can potentially lead to death.

    If indeed Schlemmers main concern is, as Tut Schlemmer puts it, man and

    space, than what kind of man and what kind of space does his work suggest? Upon a closer

    reading of the way in which humor operates in The Bauhaus Dances, it seems impossible to

  • 21

    write off Schlemmers ideas of man and space as inapplicable aesthetic theorizations, or as

    Kisselgoff, the New York Times author, suggested in 1982, to understand his work through the

    metaphysical dimension behind [his] abstract dance theater. The space on stage in

    Schlemmers dances, organized by the neat grid on stage, oscillates and shivers between a

    rigid order and unexpected moments of madness and chaos. It is not as though the organized

    grid space of the space were just a clean blank slate; rather, it is textured with an immanent

    sense of danger and unpredictability. One must read Schlemmers conception of the body,

    then, revealing a similar type of oscillation. Even if the literature on his work emphasizes the

    abstract form of his costumes and movement, we must consider what paradigm of the body the

    costumes and movement construct. Similarly to the stage space, the costumes at once hide and

    heighten the characteristics of the characters on stage, illuminating often beautiful and often

    traumatic insights.

  • 22

    The Bauhaus Dances: Dance and Architecture

    When analyzing the two most iconic Schlemmer essays, one sees that the oscillation

    between rigidity and chaos in Schlemmers pieces stemmed from a very specific approach to

    theater. That is, he theorized theater through two seemingly opposed strategies- dance and

    architecture. He not only theorizes the theater but also the human body through these two

    fundamentally contrasting disciplines. The body seems theorized and rendered somewhere

    between a bodily organism and a rigid structure.

    In the essay Man and the Art Figure, Schlemmer discusses the dancer as the

    central figure in the theater: he opens by stating that the history of the theater is the history of

    the transfiguration of the human form.32 In the essay Theater, however, Schlemmer states

    that the stage is above all an architectonic spatial organism where all things happening to it

    and within it exist in a spatially conditioned relationship. One could see both his writing and

    his work, then, as embodiments of the very conflict between the organic and the mechanic. This

    very tension is a historical question of Schlemmers time, apparent in Dada and Surrealism

    movements, in which artists questioned the very basis of human subjectivity in relationship to

    increasing mechanization. The Dadaists were interested in the notion of chance operated art

    making, where the external system of events determined the work of art as opposed to the

    subjectivity of the artist. Marcel Duchamps notes on the readymade best exemplify this

    32 Oskar Schlemmer, Man and the Art Figure, in Theater of the Bauhaus, ed. Walter Gropius and

    Arthur Wensinger (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996) p. 17.

  • 23

    attitude:

    By planning for a moment to come (on such a day, such a date, such a minute), to inscribe a readymadeThe important thing then is just this matter of timing, this snapshot effect, like a speech delivered on no matter what occasion but at such and such an hour. It is a kind of rendezvous. Naturally inscribe that date, hour, minute on the readymade as information.33

    It is as though the work of art has become a mechanical object, one that can be produced

    instantaneously provided the conditions allow. Photography also played an important role in both

    Dadaist and Surrealist discourse. Duchamp mentions the snapshot effect in the quote

    above, pointing to the change in artistic process the mechanical tool of photography had to the

    process of art making. Walter Benjamins famous Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction

    comments on the fact that the reproducibility of photography strips away the notion of a work of

    arts distinct and unique sense of aura and cult value, and instead the camera intervenes

    with the resources of its lowering and liftings, its interruptions and isolations, its extensions and

    accelerationsthe camera introduces us to unconscious optics as does psychoanalysis to

    unconscious impulses.34 That is, the mechanical often replaces, magnifies, or surpasses the

    human consciousness and thus affects the very state of human subjectivity.

    It is Schlemmers exploration of this tension, then, between the mechanic and the

    human in his choreographic work that provides rich material for a formal analysis of the

    choreography not only in terms of content, as was explored in Chapter One, but also in terms of

    33 Marcel Duchamp, Salt Seller: The Writings of Marcel Duchamp (New York: Oxford University Press,

    1973) p 32. 34 Walter Benjamin, Illuminations trans. Hannah Arendt (New York: Schocken Books, 1968) p. 237.

  • 24

    the very physical conception of the human body. Beyond the dark content and sarcastic humor

    of the piece, the body itself seems to hinge between either extremely mechanic and automatic

    movements or extremely recognizable everyday human gestures. Often, the sharp distinction

    between machinelike movements and human gesture disintegrates, and thus the very distinction

    between human and machine seems to disintegrate. In Gesture Dance, the sardonic laughter is

    executed with such rhythmic certainty that it seems to almost reference the movement of a

    machine. Or, in Game of Bricks, as the dancers move the bricks around the space, their

    movement is so extremely controlled that the every day gestures seem to oscillate between

    automatism and familiarity. To Schlemmer, the body is both an organic and mechanical entity

    and is characterized both by its own internal laws but also its response to external space.

    In Schlemmers case, then, the external space surrounding the organic body

    seems particularly rigid and structured, limiting the body to certain square or linear types of

    movement. This conception of space can be understood as his architectural understanding of

    theatrical space. The Bauhaus was an institution dedicated to architecture. However, many of

    the architectural ideas discussed at the Bauhaus can be traced back to the earlier Werkbund

    and De Stijl movements. After all, Walter Gropius, who trained originally with the German

    Werkbund group, was the director of the school from 1919 to 1927. Theo van Doesberg, a key

    figure in the De Stijl movement, also taught at the Bauhaus from 1922 to 1924.

    The iconic Werkbund building, Fagus Shoe Factory from 1912, designed by Walter

  • 25

    Gropius, is a coining example of the Werkbund architecture that directly influenced Bauhaus

    building aesthetics and, ultimately, Schlemmers own conception of space. The Fagus Shoe

    Factory was one of the first explorations in architectural building in exclusively glass and steel.

    Though this aesthetic has now become the prototype for commercial skyscraper building, at the

    time of the Factorys conception, glass was thought of as an almost transcendental material

    that could transform a dark, damp interior space into a bright, transparent one. This idea was

    particularly powerful in that glass could transform the usually miserable working environment of a

    factory into an almost pleasurable one. At the same time, though, the steel grid emphasized the

    mechanical, industrial, disciplined structure of the building as well as the very internal

    mechanisms of the factory. The space was both open to external light but at the same time was

    cohered by the intense internal logic and rigor of the grid. The constant reiteration of the grid

    within the factory, then, could be seen as an architectural quotation relating the space of the

    factory to a greater idea of order, industry, and discipline. In this way, the structure is not a self-

    contained whole, but the logic of an external order determines the behavior of this structure.

    One could look to De Stijl works to see further explorations of breaking apart an internally

    cohesive architecture. The De Stijl movement was centralized in Holland and took root by about

    1917. De Stijl simply means The Style, and the aim of the movement was to create a

    common language of contemporary material forms that were appropriate for the times. Some of

    the key figures included Piet Mondrian, Theo van Doesburg, and Gerrit Thomas Rietveld. From

  • 26

    one of their proclamations: Under the supremacy of materialism, handicraft reduced men to

    the level of machines; the proper tendency for the medium (in the sense of cultural development)

    is as the unique medium of the very opposite, social liberation.35 Indeed, when one looks at an

    early Gerrit Thomas Rietveld design Red/Blue Chair from 1918, one sees the rigid order of the

    grid established by earlier movements dispersed by what seems to be a liberation of the grid

    from predictability. The back of the seat is a floating diagonal plane; the black wood planks that

    hold the chair together are painted yellow at the ends, creating a further sense of movement. It is

    as though this design is not simply reiterating the order of the grid, but is emphasizing the

    movement possible in the reconstruction or retheorization of the grid. Theo van Doesburgs

    Spatial Diagram for a House from 1924 is another example of the De Stijl aesthetic where a

    predictable organization of planes breaks down, and the planes seem to hover asymmetrically

    between each other as though caught in motion. It is as though a greater logic of forms cannot

    be pinned down and stabilized; rather, the aesthetic of the De Stijl points to the possibility of

    movement and change within a seemingly closed system.

    The space Schlemmer creates on stage, then, can be related to both Werkbund and

    De Stijl philosophies. Especially in The Bauhaus Dances, Schlemmer literally draws a white grid

    on the stage that rigorously orders the movement and relationships of the dancers on stage.

    However, the movement makes apparent that this grid is there to call attention to the moments in

    35 William Curtis, Modern Architecture Since 1900 (New York: Phaidon, 1996) p. 156.

  • 27

    which the order of this grid is shattered. In Schlemmers work, then, the body reacts to this

    architectural space in a both critical and complicit way. Often it seems as though the body is

    simply an organism repeating the rules of the space around it, like a factory worker constantly

    repeats the hierarchical logic of a factory. Amidst this passive repetition, Schlemmer employs

    everyday gestural movement that eerily calls to attention the human subject hidden deep within

    the bulky cushions of the costume, the seemingly endlessly repetitive following of the grid. The

    body is at once a receptacle that appears pre-coded to follow certain motions and at once a

    being with spontaneous communicative impulses. This dual subjectivity of the body is a powerful

    method of criticism that extends beyond the immediate humor discussed in chapter one.

    That is, Schlemmers conscious decision to incorporate a discussion on space into his

    dances could be seen as a powerful tool that engages dance with a discourse on space and

    subjectivity. That is, space could be thought of as a physical structure, but space could also be

    thought of as the interaction between bodies and physical structures. Thus, it seems that to

    Schlemmer, dance is a powerful medium in which this interaction can be fully explored. Indeed,

    Schlemmer states in his essay Theater that The stage is above all an architectonic spatial

    organism where all things happening to it and within it exist in a spatially conditioned

    relationship.36 The very phrase architectonic spatial organism defines the stage as both

    a mechanic and organic space that obeys architectural laws as well as the laws of a natural

    36 Oskar Schlemmer, Theater (Bhne), in Theater of the Bauhaus, ed. Walter Gropius and Arthur

    Wensinger (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996) p. 85

  • 28

    organism. Most importantly, though, space determines mans movement, as Schlemmer

    describes space as a spatial-linear web which will have a decisive influence on the man who

    moves about within itthe human figure becomes a space-bewitched creature, so to speak.37

    Schlemmer understands choreography and movement itself as a primarily spatial

    idea and activity; what determines movement first and foremost is the human figures

    engagement with their external space. Thus, the very origin and motivation for subjects

    movements does not seem to come from an internal space of expression but rather the

    movements stem from the subjects interaction with the space around them. In a way, this

    motivation of movement points to an externalized subjectivity, where circumstance, space, a

    logic outside of the human subject seems to play just as much of a role in determining movement

    as much as the logic of the human body.

    This conceptualization of the human subject as both an internally determined but

    also externally determined entity is in no way a simply pessimistic outlook that renders the body

    as simply passive to its environment. If anything, this seems to stem from Schlemmers belief in

    the power and possibility of the theater in redetermining use and thoughts on space and

    mechanization. In Man and the Art Figure, Schlemmer declares:

    Utopia? It is indeed astonishing how little has been accomplished so far in this direction. This materialistic and practical age has in fact lost the genuine feeling for play and for the miraculous. Amazed at the flood of technological advance, we accept these wonders of utility as being already perfected art

    37 Ibid, p. 92.

  • 29

    form, while actually they are only prerequisites for its creation.38

    That is, Schlemmers conception of space within his Bauhaus Dances could be seen as an

    attempt in his part to approach mechanized space as an aesthetic tool to create new theater

    works. Similarly to the De Stijl embrace of the grid as a visual design tool that could be used to

    mobilize movement, Schlemmer seems to incorporate the rigidity of the grid in his theater

    space in order to mobilize a new kind of movement and theater that could take mechanization

    beyond utility and into the realm of creation.

    The four types of transformations of the human body that Schlemmer proposes in his

    essay Man and the Art Figure are examples of a mobilization of mechanization as a tool for

    creation. Looking at these four transformations, one can see the direct correlation between

    Schlemmers choreography and his engagement with architecture, industry, and

    mechanization. Schlemmer defines the first type, ambulant architecture, as cubical forms

    transferred to the human shape: head, torso, arms, legs are transformed into spatial-cubical

    constructions.39 This conception of the body literally truncates the body into architectural

    forms; at the same time, this truncation provides the basis for a new type of mechanical bodily

    movement. All other three types of transformation, technical organism, the marionette, and

    dematerialization, point to a certain mechanistic property of the body that is then accentuated. In

    a way, this approach in interpreting the material properties through mechanical laws emphasizes

    38 Oskar Schlemmer, Man and the Art FIgure in Theater of the Bauhaus, ed. Walter Gropius and

    Arthur Wensinger (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996) p. 31 39 Ibid, p. 26.

  • 30

    the possibility of order that the body holds. And if, as Schlemmer states we need number,

    measure, and law as armor and as a weapon,

    lest we be swallowed up by chaos,40 these models of orderly bodily transformations

    could be seen as Schlemmers constructive theoretical weapon. These transformations

    show us that Schlemmers original conceptions of body and space, which stemmed from the

    unity of the mechanical study of architectural space and organic study of the human body, were

    models that provided a contemporary and philosophically rich understanding of the body. This

    kind of understanding, then, could change the very subjectivity of the viewer by providing a

    sense of order and law to the body and space.

    40 Oskar Schlemmer, Perspektiven address, quoted in Karin von Maur, The Art of Oskar

    Schlemmer, in Oskar Schlemmer, ed. Arnold Lehman and Brenda Richardson, (Baltimore: The Baltimore Art Museum, 1980) p. 120.

  • 31

    Mensch : The Human F igu re and Iden t i t y

    When one looks at Schlemmers syllabus for his Mensch course of 1928, one

    sees an artist and a thinker who was seeking to create and preserve an intact human

    identity in an increasingly absurd and chaotic world. Walter Benjamin eloquently explains

    the collision of modernity and humanity as one of contradiction:

    For never has experience been contradicted more thoroughly than strategic experience by tactical warfare, economic experience by inflation, bodily experience by mechanical warfare, moral experience by those in power. A generation that had gone to school on a horse drawn streetcar now stood under the open sky in a countryside in which nothing remained unchanged but the clouds, and beneath these clouds, in a field of force of destructive torrents and explosions, was the tiny, fragile, human body.41

    At a time in when the human being and the human body were constantly threatened by

    change and destruction, Schlemmers course put forward a method to organize the

    human experience in a way contemporary to modern society. Compared to the empathy

    and pathos of Benjamins description of the contradiction of experience, Schlemmers

    syllabus is bold, ambitious, and ordered:

    Mensch/Human : Compulsory for the third semester, 2 weekly period, 21 double periods in all. It is essential for the new life , which should express itself as a modern feeling about the world and life, that man should be understood as a cosmic being. His conditions of existence, his relationships with the natural and artificial environment, his mechanism and organism, his material, spiritual, and intellectual image; in short, man as a bodily and spiritual being is a necessary and important subject of instruction.42

    41 Walter Benjamin, The Storyteller, Illuminations, trans Hannah Arendt (New York: Schocken

    Books, 1968) p. 84. 42 Oskar Schlemmer, Man: Teaching Notes from the Bauhaus. (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1972) p. 26.

  • 32

    The syllabus was meticulously planned for twenty-one periods, in which he taught

    one visual studio class, one biology class, and then one philosophy class. This three-

    class cycle was repeated with different content seven times. He gave biology lectures

    such as Respiration and Circulation, philosophy lectures such as Materialism,

    Realism, and Idealism, and formal visual studios such as Man and Space.43

    Taught in one of Schlemmers last years at the Bauhaus, this syllabus gives a

    comprehensive list of subjects that Schlemmer believed were the most essential ways to

    understand modern man. The order in which the cycles were repeated: form, biology, and

    philosophy suggest how Schlemmer conceived his theories of the human body. His

    dedication to the materiality of the body was a reflection of Bauhaus formalism, which

    centered around the study of the materiality of a medium before going into theoretical

    discussion. For example, when making a wood sculpture, the unique qualities of the wood

    would be the basis for the artwork. Schlemmer states that in his form classes, he

    wants his students to explore the ways of movement, the choreography of the everyday,

    organized movement in gymnastics and dance.44 The study of the mechanics and

    kinetics of movement (or dance) lead to studies of the science of the body as well as the

    philosophies of the human body and being. Whether paintings, dances, or writings,

    Schlemmers most serious works are based on studies on the unique material quality of

    43 Ibid, p. 29-30. 44 Ibid., p 26.

  • 33

    the body. However, his ideas theorize this body in ways that go beyond its physical

    qualities, incorporating philosophy, biology, and even psychology. Thus, for Schlemmer,

    human form is a method for him to get to theorization and philosophy. Rather than being

    the means and the end, his artistic and choreographic works could be seen as a means

    to communicate his theory or philosophy of the body. Working backward, then, one can

    analyze the theories of the body in his class Mensch to ask what meaning they can hold

    for us today as contemporary thinkers and artists.

    Often Schlemmers work is written off simply as an interesting mechanical dance

    experiment; However, to fully understand Schlemmers seemingly blind dedication to

    finding order, abstraction, and universal laws in the human body, one must locate his

    work within the upheaval, change, and trauma of the Weimar Republic in Germany. That

    is, his writing and choreography must be situated and interpreted politically. If, as he

    states, we need number, measure, and law as armor and as a weapon, lest we be

    swallowed up by chaos 45, he is asserting that his work itself is a weapon against the

    crises of modernity, such as displacement, homelessness, rupture, and trauma. When

    one looks beyond the organized precision of his public writing (such as Man and the

    Art Figure or the Mensch syllabus) and examines his personal journal entries, the

    45 Oskar Schlemmer, Perspektiven address, quoted in Karin von Maur.The Art of Oskar

    Schlemmer, in Oskar Schlemmer, ed. Arnold Lehman and Brenda Richardson, (Baltimore: The Baltimore Art Museum, 1980) p. 120.

  • 34

    prevalence of his dark humor recording experiences of trauma or displacement cannot be

    ignored, especially before and after his years at the Bauhaus. In the periods before he

    joined the Bauhaus, he often mentions the shattering of tradition in early modernist art

    and intellectual movements; later, he often writes of his growing sense of emotional

    displacement within his own country. In the early period, he is at once overwhelmed and

    excited by the possibilities of change: all traditions are shattered. The tradition of

    Classical Antiquity has been toppled. Artists are surveying the fieldonce you reject

    classical painting and art, the sky is the limit.46 Although one cannot superficially link

    his earlier work with his later experience, one can approach his work with a sense of his

    disposition towards radical change and displacement. His theories, then, can be read as

    artistic and psychological paradigms of subjectivity that helped both himself and others

    at an attempt to have a sense of internal cohesion in an externally fractured system.

    The question is, then, what kind of strategies did he use to create the paradigms

    of subjectivity that he discussed? At one extremely important level, Schlemmer created a

    historiography of the body throughout time. I am using the word historiography here

    in the way that Keith Jenkins defines history in his book Rethinking History:history/

    historiography is an inter-textual, linguistic construct. 47 That is, Schlemmer constructed

    a distinct historical narrative of the human body by drawing together previously unrelated

    46 Letters and Diaries of Oskar Schlemmer, p. 23. 47 Keith Jenkins, What History Is, in Re-Thinking History (London: Routledge, 1991), p 5.

  • 35

    texts and thinkers. He draws from a wide range of historical artists and writers to base his

    course on: Albrecht Durers studies in bodily proportions, Egyptian theories of the body,

    as well as Polycles, the Greek thinker who established the canon of the human body,

    Leonardo da Vinci, and Fritsch the anatomist. Schlemmer seems to operate in a method

    that is the direct opposite method of the Dadaists, who rejected history and theorized that

    the future should be opened up in the form of continual breaks rather than by continuity.

    In his diary he speaks of the Dadaists: Arp and the others in Zurich-a lot of it seems to

    be hollow decoration.48 What Schlemmer seems most opposed to is art that is simply

    reactionary to its environment. Schlemmer was an artist who stated that even taking

    one step is a most grave and serious event,49 or that each small step could hold great

    meaning. It seems that the historiography of the body he presented to students was a

    way of assigning great historical and philosophical significance to the body. The

    significance of the body, however, is not an external knowledge.

    He seems to propose that this understanding and study of history is integral to a

    formation of identity. When he states in his syllabus that it is essential for the new

    life , which should express itself as a modern feeling about the world and life, that man

    should be understood as a cosmic being, he emphasizes the personal necessity he

    sees in taking this course. Here is the crux of the significance of this course; Schlemmer

    48 Letters and Diaries of Oskar Schlemmer, p. 69 49 Ibid.

  • 36

    proposes that a visual, biological, and philosophical study of the human body is

    fundamental to the very subjectivity of an individual. That is, the changes in the modern

    world are so drastic that a shift in the conceptual understanding of the body is the basis

    for a sound, grounded subjectivity.

    Schlemmers theories of the body, then, are based on the idea of a body that is

    whole within itself. The body conveys cosmic and universal ideas when looked at in

    isolation, as long as it remains within the physical laws of the world around it. Rather than

    looking at what the body might be in relationship to other bodies, or looking at states of

    the body that change and mutate on a day-to-day basis, such as the processes of aging,

    dying, or pain, Schlemmer theorizes what I will call a simulacrum of the body. In the

    essay Plato and the Simulacrum Deleuze states that in Western culture we have

    proceeded, then, from a first determination of the Platonic motive; to distinguish essence

    from appearance, the intelligible from the sensible, the Idea from the image, the model

    from the simulacrum.50 He calls for a re-evaluation of the simulacrum and speaks of the

    simulacrum in relationship to art.

    The simulacrum is constructed around a disparity, a difference; it interiorizes a dissimilitude. That is why we can no longer even define it with regard to the model...the simulacrum includes within itself the differential point of view, and the spectator is made part of the simulacrum, which is transformed and deformed according to his point

    50 Gilles Deleuze. Plato and the Simulacrum trans. Rosalind Krauss. October, Vol. 27. (Winter,

    1983), p. 43.

  • 37

    of view. In short, folded within the simulacrum there is a process of going mad, a process of limitlessness.51

    That is, to Deleuze the simulacrum must not be thought of as an inadequate model, but

    the very inadequacy and the difference from the model the simulacrum holds must be

    thought of as its essential. The fact that it will never be true to the ideal model is not a

    fact to mourn, but the very richness that the simulacrum gives the spectator.

    This gives us a theoretical basis on which to think of Schlemmers concept of

    man, especially in relationship to this course Mensch. Schlemmer in no way attempts to

    construct a feasibly whole or definitive understanding of the human psyche, physiology,

    or philosophy; his class points to its own inadequacy but in doing so points to the very

    richness and endlessness of what it attempts to explain. That is, Schlemmers attempt at

    providing a coherent model of human identity, his class Mensch, produces a simulacrum

    of human identity. This simulacrum, thus, as Deleuze states is constructed around a

    disparity, a difference; it interiorizes a dissimilitude.52 The order and sense of history

    that Schlemmer constructs is based upon the fact that the order will never be a

    representation of reality. His model of human identity is faulty in the sense that it is not

    real or even close to being whole, but necessary in the sense that the failed attempt

    provides a sense of order that would not exist otherwise.

    It is this term, then, that could be best used to describe the whole of Schlemmer

    51 Ibid, p. 49. 52 Ibid.

  • 38

    s work. The simulacrum points to the rupture, the gap, the irresolvable difference

    between reality and the ideal model. However, what the simulacrum does is stubbornly

    produce a continuing, spiraling search for, perhaps what Schlemmer would call

    number, measure, and law as armor and as a weapon against the otherwise

    multiplicitous, chaotic unfolding of events in reality. The very making of a simulacrum,

    then, could be seen as an act of resistance against a complicit acceptance reality.

    Schlemmers construction of a simulacrum of the human body and human identity was a

    weapon against the frustrating and fracturing reality of experience.

  • 39

    B ib l iog raphy

    Bayer, Herbert, Walter Gropius and Ise Gropius . Bauhaus. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1938. Carr, William. The History of Germany: 1815-1945. New York: St. Martins Press, 1979.

    Curtis, William. Modern Architecture Since 1900. New York: Phaidon, 1996. Deleuze, Gilles. Plato and the Simulacrum trans. Rosalind Krauss. October, Vol. 27. (Winter, 1983), pp. 45-56. Dodds, George and Tavernor, Robert Ed. Body and building: essays on the changing relation of body and architecture. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2002. Droste, Magdalena, Bauhaus, New York: Taschen, 2005. Marcel Duchamp. Salt Seller: The Writings of Marcel Duchamp. New York: Oxford University Press, 1973. Fiedler, Jeannine ed. Social Utopias of the Twenties: Bauhaus, Kibbutz and the Dream of the New Man. Germany: Mller and Busmann Press , 1995. Foster, Hal, Rosalind Krauss, Yve-Alain Bois, Benjamin H.D. Buchloh. Art Since 1900: Modernism, Antimodernism, Postmodernism. New York: Thames and Hudson, 2004. Frampton, Kenneth. Modern Architecture. London: Thames and Hudson, 2004. Goldberg, Roselee. Performace Art: from Futurism to the Present. London: Thames and Hudson, 2001. Hochman, Elaine. Bauhaus: Crucible of Modernism. New York: Fromm International, 1997. (Avery Bauhaus Section) Huxley, Michael and Witts, Noel ed. The Twentieth Century Performance Reader. New York: Routledge, 1996. Jenkins, Keith. Re-Thinking History. London: Routledge, 1991. Kisselgoff, Anna. They Created Dance Works at the Bauhaus, too The New York Times. October 31, 1982.

  • 40

    Kniesche, Thomas W, and Brockmann, Stephen ed. Dancing on the Volcano: essays on the culture of the Weimar Republic. Columbia SC: Camden House, 1994. Lahusen, Susanne. Oskar Schlemmer: Mechanical Ballets? Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research, Vol. 4, No. 2. (Autumn, 1986), p. 65-77. Lehman, Arnold and Richardson, Brenda ed. Oskar Schlemmer. Baltimore: The Baltimore Museum of Art, 1986. Lodder, Christine, Russian Constructivism. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983. Lee, Stephen J. The Weimar Republic. London: Routledge, 1998. Man and mask: Oskar Schlemmer and the Bauhaus stage / Director: Gottfried Just. Videocassette. Bavaria Atelier GMBH Production, 1968. Moholy-Nagy,Laszlo and Schlemmer,Oskar. The Theater of the Bauhaus. Trans.Arthur Wensinger. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1996. (Check out of Barnard Library) Moynihan, D.S. Oskar Schlemmers Bauhaus Dances: Debra McCalls Reconstructions The Drama Review: TDR, Vol. 28, No. 3, Reconstruction. (Autumn, 1984), p. 46-58. Oskar Schlemmer: Muse Cantini Catalogue. Paris: Muse de Marseille, 1999. Reynolds, Nancy and McCormick, Malcolm. Dance in the Twentieth Century: No Fixed Points. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003. Schlemmer, Oskar. Man: Teaching Notes from the Bauhaus. Trans. Janet Seligman. Cambridge: M.I.T Press, 1971. Schlemmer, Oskar. The Letters and Diaries of Oskar Schlemmer. Ed. Tut Schlemmer. Trans. Krishna Winston. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1972. Schwarz, Arturo. The Complete Works of Marcel Duchamp. New York: Delan Greenidge Editions, 1997.

  • 41

    Sharp, Dennis. Bauhaus, Dessau. London: Phaidon, 1993. Toepfer, Karl. Empire of Ecstasy: Nudity and Movement in German Body Culture, 1910-1935. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997. Wick, Rainer ed. Teaching at the Bauhaus. Germany: Hatje Cantz. 2000.

  • 42

    I l l us t ra t ions

    1) Oskar Schlemmer, Space Dance 1926 (with Werner Seidhoff, Walter Kaminsky)

    2) Space Dance Masks

    3) Oskar Schlemmer, Figure in a Grid Space 1924

    4) Oskar Schlemmer, Four Transformations 1924

    5) Oskar Schlemmer, Man in the Realm of Ideas 1928

    6) Oskar Schlemmer, Figure Studies 1928