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event news 75th ANNIVERSARY OF THE BARCELONA PAVILION 78

On the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the The idea, therefore, was to utilise the Pavilion as a Taken into account will be the situation of the city
construction of the German Pavilion for the 1929 significant pretext on the basis of which to develop a that accommodated the building and the way Mies'
Barcelona International Exposition, a series of set of considerations, interpretations and opinions in professional career evolved to the point where he
lectures were given by the Fundació Mies van the light of recent studies and research. managed to define one of the emblematic works
der Rohe. of what came to be known as the Modern
The series is addressed to architects, historians, Movement.
The objective was to foster critical reflection students and anyone interested in modern artistic
on the emergence of a form of architecture that culture and will attempt to present the 1929 German
was characterised by a commitment to modernity Pavilion in the contexts that made its construction
in the context of a markedly historicist panorama possible: Berlin and Barcelona, each with its own
– as exemplified by the Exposition precinct itself – cultural baggage, will be revisited.
in a culturally backward country, that is, the Spain
of Primo de Rivera's dictatorship.

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event news BARCELONA PAVILION 79

The George Kobe sculpture was a last minute choice

One of the classic designs of International There was no other furniture or fixtures, apart from The Pavilion received little attention during its brief
Modernism, technically this building should be a deep red velvet curtain. lifetime. The late twenties were a time when
called the German Pavilion in Barcelona, since it Modernists were struggling to gain commissions and
was constructed as a temporary building for the "The site selected by Mies for the German Pavilion in acceptance of their ideas .
International Exposition in Barcelona of 1929. Barcelona allowed for the transverse passage of
visitors from a terrace-like avenue bordering the Nonetheless, the building soon became a totem for
Though temporary, it was still made of permanant exhibition palaces to the other attractions. In addition, Mies' like-minded contemporaries.
materials--steel, glass, marble, and travertine. it afforded fine views of the exposition grounds and of
the city of Barcelona. The building had no real Less is More
The Barcelona Pavilion was designed to represent program, as that term is understood and used by
Germany’s "openness, liberality, modernity and architects today. It was to be whatever Mies chose to Freed from traditional design constraints (i.e. no-one
internationalism…we do not want anything but make of it. had to live or work in the building, and the only
clarity, simplicity and honesty," stipulated the 'exhibits' were a few chairs designed by Mies, he was
Commissar General of the Reich. The only function it had to accommodate was a able to construct a building which came to epitomise
reception for the King and Queen of Spain as they what Modern architecture should be clean,
A prominent member of the German architectural signed the "Golden Book" officially opening the uncomplicated in appearance, with no apparent
avant-garde, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, was exposition. reference to past historical styles, and using modern
commissioned to design it. A year later he would be technology to explore new ways of construction.
the Director of the Bauhaus School for art, crafts According to Mies, the furniture designed and
and architecture, and forty years after that he would fabricated especially for the pavilion, the Barcelona The building still looks modern today, partly because
be commemorated as one of the great architects of chairs and stools, went unused during the opening many of the design features are still copied by 21st
the twentieth century. ceremony. century architects.

Although the building was dismantled in 1930 it was "To tell you the truth," he remarked, "nobody The glass appeared to be load bearing which made
rebuilt on the original site by a team of 3 architects ever used them." the thin concrete roof seem to float above the stone
in 1986. podium on which the whole structure is based.
It was not intended to exhibit the works of German
Mies also designed the chairs and stools which manufacturers, but was rather supposed to make a The roof is held in place by cruciform steel columns
were expensive but austere in look: white leather bold statement about contemporary Germany. which are clad in chrome. The walls are marble and
strands were interweaved on thick-firm cushions and travertine. The open-plan nature of the Pavilion
the x-shaped frame is in chromed steel. The building lasted six months before it was allowed Mies to experiment with space, creating an
dismantled and the materials sold. ambiguity about what is interior and what is exterior,
The chairs were designed to be used as thrones for and there is a tranquillity about the place despite its
the Spanish King and Queen when the German Nonetheless, it remained an icon of the Modern completely open-ended structure.
Ambassador received them. Movement throughout the 20th century,
The simple emptiness of the Pavilion was in itself a
revolutionary feature.

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event news BARCELONA PAVILION -- THE ONYX WALL 80

According to Mies:

"Right from the beginning I had a clear idea of what


to do with that pavilion. But nothing was fixed yet, it
was still a bit hazy.

But then when I visited the showrooms of a marble


firm at Hamburg, I said: "Tell me, haven't you got
something else, something really beautiful?". I thought
of that freestanding wall I had, and so they said: "Well,
we have a big block of onyx. But that block is sold—to
the North German Lloyd."

They want to make big vases from it for the dining


room in a new steamer.

So I said: 'Listen, let me see it, ' and they at once


shouted: 'No, no, no, that can't be done, for
Heaven's sake you mustn't touch that marvellous
piece." But I said: "Just give me a hammer, will you,
and I'll show you how we used to do that at home."

So reluctantly they brought a hammer, and they


were curious whether I would want to chip away a
corner. But no, I hit the block hard just once right in
the middle, and off came a thin slab the size of my
hand.

'Now go and polish it at once so that I can see it."


And so we decided to use onyx. We fixed the
quantities and brought the stone."

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event news BARCELONA PAVILION 81

Official party photo taken at the Opening of the German Pavilion at the Barcelona World Expo, 1929.

Invitation to the official relaunching of the reconstructed Barcelona Pavilion, 1986

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event news BARCELONA PAVILION 82

Postcard showing architecture at the World Expo in Barcelona, 1929 - highlighting just how radically progressive the German pavillon was.

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event news NOTABLE COMMENTS CONCERNING THE PAVILION 83

Despite the perfect vertical and horizontal "The Barcelona pavilion...was without practical
lines, the building appears in no way hard or purpose. No functional programme determined or
industrial, and yet it was new technology and even influenced its appearance. No part of its
methods of utilising concrete and steel made the interior was taken up by exhibits: the building
whole thing possible. itself was the object on view and the 'exhibition'
was an architectural space such as had never
The two reflecting pools and Georg Kolbe's been seen. The building consisted of walls and
classical and curvy female statue combine with columns arranged on a low travertine marble
Mies' geometry to create a space which is podium...it channeled space between separate
amazingly calm and meditative; one in which vertical and horizontal planes. But this time the
Mies's famous dictum 'less is more' seems flow of space was held within clamp-like walls at
perfectly appropriate. each end of the podium."
Martin Pawley,
Today architects and students flock to the
Pavilion to admire Mies' achievement, and to see
for themselves a building whose influence can be "In reality, the Barcelona Pavilion was a patch-up
seen in every building which seeks to do away structure. Technically Mies was unable to erect
with stone walls and replace them with sheets of the pavilion as a pure 'Dom-ino' structure; the
plate glass. eight cruciform columns alone could not support
the roof and a number of extra columns had to be
Mies himself went on to perfect the corporate glass lodged in the double-skinned marble screens to
and steel skyscraper in the United States, using help carry the load. But this makeshift structure did
many of the techniques he applied so successfully the job Mies asked of it and the plan remained
at his Pavilion. inviolate. He pursued the idea in his model house
at the Berlin Building Exhibition of 1931,..."
And although the Pavilion is, in a sense, pointless, Frank Russell,
in 1929 it stood as a monument to what the
Modernist architect could achieve.
"Radical rationalist that he is, his designs are
governed by a passion for beautiful architecture.
He is one of the very few modern architects who
has carried its theories beyond a barren functional
formula into the plastically beautiful. Material and
space disposition are the ingredients with which
he gets his effect of elegant serenity. Evoking in
his work a love for beautiful materials and textures
he emphasizes this predilection."
NOTABLE COMMENTS RE PAVILION Helen Appleton Read.

"The covered portion of the pavilion, one story high, "For me working in Barcelona was a brilliant
occupied roughly the north half of the podium. moment in my life."
Beneath its flat roof ran the series of interwoven Mies van der Rohe.
spaces that has, as much as anything else, won the "Architecture is an expression of how one
Barcelona Pavilion its immense prestige. The roof protects himself against the outside world, and
rested on walls, or more properly wall planes, "Artistic expression is a manifestation of the unity how one manages to conquer it. It always
placed asymmetrically but always in parallels or of design and material.This once again underlines represents the expression of spiritual decision in
perpendiculars, so that they appeared to slide past the necessity to incorporate works of sculpture space".
each other in a space through which the viewer (or painting) creatively into the interior setting from Mies van der Rohe
could walk more or less endlessly, without ever the outset. In the great epochs of cultural history
being stopped within a cubical area. This open plan, this was done by architects as a matter of course "There are real construction elements, from
with its intimation of an infinite freedom of and, no doubt, without conscious reflection." which a new richer architecture can be
movement, was at the same time qualified by two Mies van der Rohe. developed. They give us a measure of
rows of equally spaced, cruciform columns that freedom that we no longer want to give up.
stood in martial formation amid the gliding walls. Only now can we divide, open and join space
The columnar arrangement constituted Mies's first "I have tried to make an architecture for a with the landscape, in order to fulfil modern
use of the grid as an ordering factor in his building, technological society. I have wanted to keep man's need for space. Simplicity of construction,
a prefiguration of the monumental regularity that everything reasonable and clear--to have an clarity of tectonic means and purity of materials
marked the work of his American years." architecture that anybody can do." become the bearers of a new beauty".
Franz Schulze Mies van der Rohe Mies van der Rohe

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event news FOUNDATION MIES VAN DER ROHE CELEBRATIONS 84

The Fundació Mies van der Rohe, along with


the member institutions of its Board of Trustees,
planned a series of activities to celebrate the 75th
anniversary of the Pavilion.

A series of cultural events are being held in


different Mediterranean cities with the aim of
promoting values such as peace, cohabitation,
solidarity and sustainability, such as the Olympic
Games in Athens, the European Cultural Capital
of Genoa and the Forum Barcelona 2004.

As a contribution to these initiatives, the theatre


group La Fura dels Baus offered its ship, the
Naumon, as a meeting point for the Fundació
Mies van der Rohe at La Biennale di Venezia.

The Naumon became the floating site for


conferences, exhibitions, workshops and shows.

On its itinerary through different Mediterranean


ports such as Athens, Barcelona, Beirut, Istanbul,
Marseilles and Venice, the Naumon will be
transformed into a laboratory where the
experiences of these cities may be analysed and
compared.

Above all, the intention is to meet a common


objective in each of these cities: research on
social housing and public space as two
compatible systems that may be conceived in a
unitary way and used as a tool for transformation
in deteriorated urban settings.

During the second half of the 20th century, the


majority of European cities were subject to
phenomena such as immigration and tourism
that have resulted in conditions of violent clashes.

Moreover, in many cities emergency situations


such as wars and natural catastrophes still
generate the relentless destruction of their
recognisable urban fabrics, resulting in the
sudden emergence of new opportunities for
construction.

During this period, almost all cities were forced


to build new housing block developments on
their outskirts that disregard the ideas of the
Modern Movement concerning typologies and
urbanism.

The outcome is the rise of new ghettos


characterised by deficient connections with the
historical city centre, a lack of qualified public
space, defective construction and a rigid,
unimaginative typological approach to public
housing design.

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event news BARCELONA ® TRADEMARK PROTECTION GRANTED 85

Knoll Announces Trademark Office Protection From the hand-buffed frame to the individual leather The issuance of these trademark registrations
for its Mies van der Rohe Barcelona® Collection squares carefully welted together, Mies intended each signals the beginning of the Company's effort to
and Flat Bar Brno Chair Barcelona® piece to honor traditional craftsmanship ensure that when architects, furniture retailers or
and meticulous attention to detail; the public purchase a Mies van der Rohe design,
October 22, 2004 they will be purchasing the genuine article, following
"God is in the details," remains his most Mies van der Rohe's historic design specifications.
Knoll, Inc., a leading designer and manufacturer of characteristic statement of philosophy, and one this
branded furniture and textiles, announced today that collection reflects.
the United States Patent and Trademark Office has
granted it registered trademark protection for five of Director of the Bauhaus school of design from 1930
its world-famous furniture designs created by Mies to 1933, Mies moved to the United States in 1937.
van der Rohe:
the Barcelona ® Chair, In 1948, he and Florence Knoll collaborated to
the Barcelona ® Stool, manufacture the Barcelona collection, comprised of
the Barcelona ® Couch the chair, stool and table, for the first time in the Andrew Cogan, CEO of Knoll, stated,
the Barcelona ® Table and United States. Later, Knoll added the Flat Bar Brno
the Flat Bar Brno Chair. Chair and the Barcelona® Couch to the collection; "We are committed to preserving the integrity of
both were made to Mies's specifications. these landmark designs, and will continue to
The grant by this government agency recognizes the manufacture these products according to the
renown of these designs and gives Knoll government To receive the legal recognition of being a registered designer's original specifications.
authority to pursue knock-offs of these registered trademark, a furniture design must be shown to the
designs. Trademark Office as having acquired an association "We are especially pleased that the United States
and recognizable distinctiveness in connection with Patent & Trademark Office has recognized the
These knock-offs, whether manufactured its manufacturer. need for trademark protection for the Barcelona
domestically or imported, will be considered collection and the Flat Bar Brno Chair, and we will
infringements of the Knoll registered trademarks and Knoll demonstrated to the government agency that be working with U.S. Customs to stop unauthorized
will subject the infringer to damages and product the Barcelona® collection has been sold in imports from reaching this country,"
impoundment. significant volume since the 1950s, had been
continuously marketed and promoted as acclaimed "Some of Mies's well-known architectural works
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, a world-famous Mies van der Rohe designs, and had been exhibited include the Seagram Building in New York City;
architect and one of the most influential designers of in design museums around the world as a work of the Lakeshore Drive Apartments in Chicago, Illinois;
the twentieth century, designed the German pavilion art. and the Tugendhat House, in Brno, Czech
for the 1929 Barcelona International Exhibition. The Republic.
result was one of the master's best-known The Trademark Office reviewed and accepted
architectural designs. Knoll's claims, and promptly issued trademark Founded in 1938, Knoll pioneered the principles of
registrations for these items. modern design in the workplace, from space
The pure composition of the Barcelona® collection planning to furniture to accessories.
has since come to epitomize Modern architecture.

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event news "GOD IS IN THE DETAILS" -- MIES 86

The modern city, with its towers of glass and steel, The cantilevered chair had a curved frame that Perfectly proportioned and finished, the simple chair
can be at least in part attributed to the influence of exploited the aesthetic, as well as the structural exuded an air of elegance and authority.
architect Mies van der Rohe. Equally significant, if possibilities of this material. Their experiments
smaller in scale, is Mies' daring design of furniture, culminated in the virtuoso Brno chair designed In 1938, Mies emigrated from Europe and moved to
pieces that exhibit an unerring sense of proportion, between 1929 and 1930 with a chromed flat steel Chicago. The rest of his career was devoted to
as well as minimalist forms and exquisitely refined frame. promoting the Modernist style of architecture in the
details. U.S., resulting in rigorously modern buildings such as
Two years later, Mies and Lilly Reich designed what the Farnsworth House and the Seagram Building,
In fact, his chairs have been called architecture in is perhaps his most famous creation - designed with Philip Johnson.
miniature exercises in structure and materials that the Barcelona chair and footstool.
achieve an extraordinary visual harmony as The Bauhaus, started by Walter Gropius in 1919 to
autonomous pieces or in relation to the interiors for Created for the German Pavilion at the Barcelona be a "laboratory for mass consumption", embraced
which they were originally designed. International Exhibition, the Pavilion chair was the machine aesthetic which focused on design and
intended as a modern throne; a thick cushion material choices that were appropriate for mass
In the mid-1920's, he began to design furniture, upholstered in luxurious leather and set upon a production. Designers were led to experiment with
pieces that he conceived and created for particular curved metal frame in the shape of an X inspired by materials and carefully scrutinized their designs for
interiors. classical furniture. manufacturability and efficiency, often more so than
for aesthetics.
In 1927, Mies met Lilly Reich, a Bauhaus alumnus His inspiration for the Barcelona chair was the Form
who collaborated with Mies on his first versions of a Fan Egyptian folding chair, long thought to be a In the period between World War I and World War II,
cantilevered chair with a tubular steel frame. symbol of power, and a folding stool from Roman the machine had a powerful impact on culture and
times. design in America and Europe.

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event news "GOD IS IN THE DETAILS" -- BARCELONA SERIES 87

Early model prototype of the Barcelona footstool.

Engineering drawings for the famous Barcelona footstool "X:" W.I.P. Sketches by Mies in his exploration for a coffee table design to suit the Barcelona chair and stool.

Mies' daring design of furniture, exhibit an unerring In fact, his chairs have been called architecture in
sense of proportion, as well as minimalist forms and miniature exercises in structure and materials that
exquisitely refined details. achieve an extraordinary visual harmony.
Barcelona collection

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event news "GOD IS IN THE DETAILS" -- OTHER CHAIRS BY MIES 88

MR Series - 1927 BRNO chair - flat bar - 1930

BRNO chair - round tubular

Artists and designers struggled to understand and For Breuer, standardized steel tubing was light, Finally, the results of this system were lighter in
make sense of the new machine-driven world, and manageable and durable. This material was to appearance and far stronger than wooden
experimented with the direction it might give to their become a significant emblem of the Modern members of similar size. The nature of wood
work. This movement towards modern design Movement. required that joints be of substantial size to give
depended heavily on new materials and necessary strength.
manufacturing processes as well as a new This famous chair is closely related to the
consideration for function. cantilevered chair by Ludwig Meis van der Rohe at This is a good example of how technological
the Bauhaus at the same period. advances affect the way products are made and
One of these new materials was tubular-steel. how they look. Ironically, chair designs such as
Why was this tube construction technique such a these, which appear very much to be machine-
The Wassily armchair by Marcel Breuer was one dramatic advancement in furniture design and made, were in fact very labor-intensive to produce
of the first examples of modular tube-steel furniture manufacture? and, therefore costly to manufacture—an aspect
and has become inextricably associated with the that ran counter to the Bauhaus philosophy.
Bauhaus. First of all, it made possible a far more efficient
method of joining components. The parts could be It was realized that the true mass-production of
A pioneer in the Modern Movement and among the welded together for clean, strong joints, with no Modern furniture would only be possible if a form
first to exploit the possibilities of tubular steel for bulky structures. of mechanized standardization was adopted.
mass-produced furniture, Breuer, a student and later
a teacher at the Bauhaus carpentry workshop, Second, the tubes could be finished with chrome However, it was not until after World War II that it
sought a material that expressed its modern became economically and technically feasible to
industrial origins in a way that wood, also a modern achieve this on a wide scale
material, could not.

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event news "MR SERIES" -- CONCEPT DESIGN SKETCHES 89

MR TABLE 1927

In 1927, the design and patent for his tubular steel cantilevered chair brought Mies into the international spotlight. The chair was a simple cantilevered curved structure with
a woven cane seat, made in various versions with and without armrests. The character of the chair, was that of a formal, refined comfort. The seat and back would give
slightly, under the user's weight, but the outward appearance replaced the cosy qualities of a large upholstered armchair - with a smaller and more streamlined chair.

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