Historical Dictionary of Architecture

EXPRESSIONISM

EXPRESSIONISM: translation

Expressionist architecture originally developed parallel to the aesthetic ideals of the Expressionist visual and performing arts in the European avant-garde from around 1910 through 1924. From its German, Dutch, and Danish origins, the term Expressionism is now used to describe the style of any building that reveals an expressive, organic distortion of shape with reference to movement and emotions, symbolic or visionary works, or natural, biomorphic shapes. Not stylized in the same manner asArt Nouveau, Expressionism takes its inspiration from a more unusual massing of form. Less practical than the opposingInternational styleof architecture, the earliest Expressionist buildings exist either on paper or were designed for temporary exhibitions or theatrical stage sets.
Expressionism in architecture was introduced by Bruno Taut, a German painter and visionary who sought to explore a highly utopian, socialist vision of modernist architecture. His Glass Pavilion, built for the Cologne Werkbund Exhibition of 1914, reveals a blending ofGothicand more exotic features in its pointeddomemade of diamond-shaped panes ofglassset atop a drum designed from piers that frame glass curtain walls. The entire structure rests on a base ofconcrete, formed like an earth mound elevated slightly off the ground. Although known today only in black-and-white photo-graphs, Taut's structure was brightly colored, with stained glass to provide a symbolic, almost spiritual interior, much like that of a Gothic church.Taut's bold use of color is unique in early-20th-century modernist architecture. Original colors are rarely preserved on such extant buildings, but Taut's bright palette can be seen in his illustrations forAlpine Architecture, a utopian treatise published in 1917. Interest in a glass structure had existed in the previous century, and Joseph Paxton's Crystal Palace, built for the London Exhibition of 1851, initiated a debate on the merits of a glass house that did not reach its resolution untilPhilipJohnson's famous Glass House was built in New Canaan, Connecticut, in 1949. Bruno Taut offered the idea that a glass house could create a transparency that would meld public and private and that would force honesty and shape more ideal human interactions. Taut's 1912 Falkenberg Housing Estate in Berlin and his housing complex built in Magdeburg in 1912-1915 both reveal his interest in bringing a humane functionalism, informed by the English garden city movement, to popular housing in Europe. As hostility toward Taut's political views mounted, he moved to Russia, then Japan, and finally to Istanbul, where he died after completing several municipal housing projects in Turkey.
The first major permanent Expressionist structure is considered to be Erich Mendelsohn's Einstein Tower, built in Potsdam, Germany, beginning in 1917 as an astrophysical observatory for the study of Albert Einstein's theory of relativity. Here Mendelsohn created a building with gentle curves and rhythms best described in musical terminology. Made to look like concrete, the shape of the building was actually created with plaster-coveredbrick, and Mendelsohn himself described the organic shape as an exploration on the mystery of Einstein's universe. In 1933, Expressionist art was outlawed by the Nazi Party as degenerate, but nonetheless expressive tendencies endured in later International style architecture. For example, the building that most closely follows Mendelsohn's curved shapes isLeCorbusier's Notre Dame du Haut, built in Ronchamp, France, in the 1950s. Situated on a hill, the church features masonry walls of sprayed white concrete and a mushroom-shaped dark roof. The roof tilts on a slant, as if it is sliding down one side, while a bell tower grows out of the opposing side. Developing a more expressive late style, here Le Corbusier uses the symbolism of light and organic shape to reflect religious spirituality. The church is constructed with thick walls that are soft in appearance and have an assortment of variously sized square and rectangular windows spread across the exterior. These windows emit moving patterns of colored light in the interior of the church, creating a deeply moving ambience.
Other Expressionist architects includeAlvar Aalto, whose Opera House in Essen, Germany, begun in 1959, features a white façade that appears to fold into curves like a piece of paper. Such later forms of Expressionism reveal a blending of modernist styles, which formed the foundation for the work ofEero Saarinen,Bruce Goff,Frank Lloyd Wright, andFrank Gehry. Thus, the legacy of Expressionism continues to informDeconstructivism,High-Tech architecture, and the even more recent bulging, amoeba-styled buildings called "Blobitecture."

  1. expressionismA genre of German painting that tried to show the subjective responses to scenes rather than the scenes themselves...Crosswordopener
  2. expressionismExpressionism translation The term Expressionismem as it applies both to German theater and to drama was a manifestation of modernism by about though the rejection of il...Historical dictionary of German Theatre
  3. expressionismExpressionism translation A movement in literature and art which has its origins in the German theater of the early th century expressionism eschews realiststrong represe...Historical Dictionary of Scandinavian Literature and Theater
  4. expressionismExpressionism translation Both the chronological parameters and the artistic definition of Expressionism have changed in recent years. Once considered an avantgarde movem...Historical dictionary of Weimar Republik
  5. expressionismexpressionism translationSynonyms and related wordsabstractionism coloring deformation distortion exaggeration false coloring falsification garbling hyperbole inaccuracy ...Moby Thesaurus
  6. expressionismExpressionism translation Identified in European art and literature as early as expressionism was a reaction against impressionism and sentimentality not to mention real...The Historical Dictionary of the American Theater
  7. expressionism[ksprenzm]экспрессионизм...Англо-русский большой универсальный переводческий словарь
  8. expressionismэкспрессионизм...Англо-русский дополнительный словарь
  9. expressionismn экспрессионизм...Англо-русский словарь Лингвистика-98
  10. expressionismexpressionism [ksprenzm] nu иск.u экспрессионизм...Англо-русский словарь Мюллера
  11. expressionismсущ. иск. экспрессионизм...Англо-русский словарь общей лексики
  12. expressionismnэкспрессионизм разновидность авангардизма в западноевропейском искусстве первой трети XX века.strong экспрессионизм разновидность авангардизма в западноевропейском иск...Англо-русский словарь по социологии
  13. expressionismn. экспрессионизм...Англо-русский словарь редакция bed
  14. expressionismсущ.emэкспрессионизм разновидность авангардизма в западноевропейском искусстве первой трети XX века....Англо-русский социологический словарь
  15. expressionismn експресонзм...Англо-украинский словарь
  16. expressionismекспресонзм...Англо-український словник
  17. expressionismn мист. експресонзм....Англо-український словник Балла М.І.
  18. expressionism[ksprenzm] n иск....Новый большой англо-русский словарь
  19. expressionismexpressionism [ksprenzm] n иск.i экспрессионизм...Новый большой англо-русский словарь II
  20. expressionismksprenzm n иск. экспрессионизм...Новый большой англо-русский словарь под общим руководством акад. Ю.Д. Апресяна
  21. expressionismЕкспресонзм...Шведсько-український словник