Although the Bauhaus exerted a profound influence on the development of European and American modernism, it did not espouse any single style or aesthetic.
Rather, it advocated a set of core values, including a respect for human scale and the principle that an object's form must suit its function. As Weber notes, the ultimate importance of the Bauhaus "was in the way it addressed the connection between our surroundings and our feelings. Morality, emotion, religion, humor: all could be echoed and nourished by what we look at and touch."
Filled with well-turned anecdotes and blissfully free from art-historical jargon, Weber's text follows the lives and careers of famed Bauhaus architects Walter Gropius and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and of the painters Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky. Weber also offers a truly touching portrait of the husband-and-wife team of Josef and Anni Albers, who befriended him during the 1970s, when he was a graduate student and they were teaching art in the United States.
Weber's tendency to stint the political circumstances surrounding the history of the Bauhaus leaves his narrative, at times, lacking a sense of real-world context. Nonetheless, this book provides an excellent introduction the personalities responsible for some of the 20th century's most innovative experiments in art and design.
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Jonathan Lopez is a columnist for Art & Antiques magazine and author of "The Man Who Made Vermeers," a biography of the forger Han van Meegeren.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

