The First Goetheanum in Photos and Documents. The exhibition begins with a photograph of the ruins after the fire in 1922 and ends with the design sketches of the project that had been initially conceived beginning in 1911-and then ultimately failed-in Munich and afterwards in 1913 was transferred to Dornach.
‘In many respects being very strange as a whole, the effect, however, in some ways
is unquestionably good, even exceptionally beautiful,’ reported a reviewer in a
Swiss building magazine in 1917 after having climbed up the hill outside of
Dornach. Initially called the Johannes Building the architectonic masterpiece of
the anthroposophical movement, the First Goetheanum, had been emerging at this
location since 1913. Never completely finished the double-cupola wood structure was
destroyed by arson on New Year’s Eve in 1922.
The building of the First Goetheanum occurrs mainly during World War I, whose
consequences were felt even by neutral Switzerland. Historically it is a threshold
period —full of social, cultural and political upheavals. Since 1800 art has been
taking the place of religion promising a sense of meaning in a world that had
become increasingly demystified by the positivism and materialism of the 19th
century. Phantasmagorias of new, unprecedented architecture pervade the various
Lebensreform circles appearing around 1900, however, in Dornach the imaginary
utopia becomes reality. Oscillating between Art Nouveau and Expressionism the
formal vocabulary of the First Goetheanum baffled contemporaries and even today
still precludes any attempt to be unequivocally categorized.
The significance of the First Goetheanum in architecture history, which in the
meantime is undisputed, is only one aspect that the exhibition at S AM aims to
cover. The multiple ways that the programmatic title ‘Constructing Community’ can
be read is intentional: suggesting a building that has been created by a community
and at the same time the building up of a community itself, i.e., its sense of
identity. As well, it’s also about communal building, as the First Goetheanum was
not built by Rudolf Steiner alone and also not only by trained craftspeople but
also by as many as 200 volunteers— members of the anthroposophical movement, who
worked tirelessly at the building site as wood carvers, painters, glass engravers
or draftsperson. While this was one way to sink costs ultimately such pragmatic
reasoning was not the crucial factor. Rather the purpose was imbedded in the
idealistic concept of an undertaking that was to be completed through the
productive efforts of many. Especially remarkable about this aim is that
professional occupational training only played a minor role. At the same time the
work of laypersons was considered as the antithesis of a professionalism that was
considered to be soulless—an idea of the time that can be traced, e.g., from the
appreciation of dilettantism within the English Reform Movement to the interest in
children’s drawings or artworks of ‘primitive’ peoples and beyond to the aleatoric
experiments of the Surrealists, all of which addressed the underlying question as
to how creative energy is to be released independent of social conditioning.
The exhibition begins with a photograph of the ruins after the fire in 1922 and
ends with the design sketches of the project that had been initially conceived
beginning in 1911–and then ultimately failed—in Munich and afterwards in 1913 was
transferred to Dornach. No longer planned at the centre of the city but rather at
the edge of a village there was a change in gestalt. The exhibition intentionally
presents the chronology in reverse: a building that no longer exists is portrayed
at the beginning; one, that doesn’t exist yet at the end. Travelling backwards
everything has its ‘right’ place in the succession: first the plans, then the
workers, followed by the mediatisation through photography, the building process
and finally the end of the building.
In this exhibition photography assumes a central role: it enables insights into the
building process, affords a reconstruction of the building. The trained metal
worker Max Benzinger documented the events with his camera, as did the St. Gallen
photographer and anthroposophist Otto Rietmann. The so-to-say ‘canonical’ photo
series, however, originated from the studio of Heydebrand-Osthoff. The images were
included in a monograph of the building ‘Der Baugedanke des Goetheanum’ that was
initially published in 1932.
Only presented ten years after the building itself no longer existed and also being
of amateurish quality, ultimately Heydebrand-Osthoff’s photos do not simulate the
substantiality of the building, but rather underscore the fact that photography
cannot approximate reality. In particular they prove that what Rudolf Steiner
intended as the main experience of the building itself is no longer possible. The
fact that the physical reality of the First Goetheanum no longer exists makes the
basic problem of architecture exhibitions —which typically use auxiliary means to
represent buildings located outside of museums—even more strongly evident in this
exhibition. Only fragments, such as photos, plans, studies, relics, written
testimonies, remain. Putting these together to form one multilayered image is the
goal of this exhibition. Archives—the source of our materials—are reservoirs of
knowledge, which themselves have to be updated. As Michel Foucault proclaimed with
respect to using archives: ‘In our time history is that which transforms documents
into monuments.‘ ‘Constructing Community. The First Goetheanum in Photos and
Documents’ provides a possibility for this.
Supporting programme
Exhibition Tours
Thursdays, 6:00–7:00 PM at S AM 3 May, 7 June, 28 June, 12 July 2012
Wednesday, 9 May 2012, 6:30 PM
‘Sculptural Forms, Curved Planes, Swinging Lines: The Dornach Anthroposophical
Colony’. Architecture Tour with Jolanthe Kugler of the Settlement on the Hill of
the Goetheanum
Sunday, 20 May 2012, 11:00 AM
Book presentation of the novel ‘Aufzeichnungen eines Sonderlings’ by A. Belyj
(1880–1934) Reading by H.-Dieter Jendreyko Cooperation of S AM Swiss Architecture
Museum with Verlag am Goetheanum and the Philosophicum Location: Philosophicum, St.
Johanns-Vorstadt 19–21, 4056 Basel
Thursday, 31 May 2012, 6:00 PM
Tour: ‘Architecture out of the Archive. Tour through the Basel- Stadt State Archive
with Presentation of Selected Sources’ with Daniel Hagmann Location: Basel-Stadt
State Archive, Martinsgasse 2, 4051 Basel
Thursday, 21 June 2012, 7:00 PM
S AM Talk with Launching of archithese Issue at Basel-Stadt State Archive.
‘Documents, Monuments? Cultural Memory and its Sites’ Issue 3’2012 of the
architecture journal archi- these will be released. In cooperation with the Basel-
Stadt State Archive the launching of the issue will take place in the ambiance of
the State Archive. The Basel-Stadt State Archive, Rudolf Steiner Archive and the
Archive at the Goetheanum are the most important lenders of materials for the
current exhibition.
Participants: Esther Baur (State Archivist, Basel-Stadt State Ar- chive), Walter
Kugler (Rudolf Steiner Archive, Dornach), Hu- bertus Adam (S AM Artistic Director)
Location: Basel-Stadt State Archive, Martinsgasse 2, 4051 Basel
The archithese issue accompanying the current S AM exhibi- tion will be available
as of the beginning of June 2012 at S AM for CHF 28.
Order online at: info@sam-basel.org or www.archithese.ch
Saturday,28July2012,8:00–6:00PM
Bus tour to visit the Goetheanum architectural model in Malsch (built in 1908/09)
and other related highlights in Karlsruhe from this period, e.g., Garden City in
Rüppurr by F. Ostendorf, 1912; Dammerstock Settlement by W. Gropius, 1912; schools
by H. Billing, K. Moser and M. Laeuger, circa 1905)
The exhibition is supported by:
Basel Stadt, Präsidialdepartement Abteilung Kultur; Freie Gemeinschaftsbank; André
und Rosalie Hoffmann; GGG Gesellschaft für das Gute und Gemeinnützige; Karl
Bubenhofer AG; sia Schweizerischer Ingenieur- und
Architektenverein; swissarchitects; Theater Basel; trans magazin; Zumtobel Licht AG
Image: © Staatsarchiv Basel-Stadt, BSL 1023 1-4-1. Foto: Atelier von Heydebrand-Osthoff
Please contact us for images, interviews and further information:
press@sam-basel.org; Tel: +41 (0)61 261 1413; Fax: +41 (0)61 261 1428
Opening: April 28th 2012, 7 pm
S AM Swiss Architecture Museum
Steinenberg 7 , P.O. Box 911, CH-4001 Basel
opening hours: tue / wed / fri 11-18h, thu 11-20.30h, sat / sun 11-17h
special hours easter 2012:
fr 06.04.2012 closed
sun 07.04.2012, 11-17 h
sat 08.04.2012, 11-17 h
mon 09.04.2012, 11-17 h
art basel 2012:
mon 11.06.2012, 10-20 h
tue 12.06.2012, 10-20 h
wed 13.06.2012, 10-22 h
thu 14.06.2012, 10-20 h
fri 15.06.2012, 10-20 h
sun 16.06.2012, 10-20 h
sat 17.06.2012, 10-20 h
mon 18.06.2012, closed
admission:
chf 10.- / 6.-