Johannes Itten

1919–1923 Bauhaus master / 1919–1923 Deputy Director

Portrait of Johannes Itten, Photo: Paula Stockmar.
Portrait of Johannes Itten, Photo: Paula Stockmar. © Kunstmuseum Bern, Itten-Stiftung / Itten-Stiftung, Kunstmuseum Bern / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2020.
  • Born 11.11.1888 Süderenlinden, Switzerland
  • Died 25.3.1967 Zürich, Schweiz

  • Married to Hildegard (‘Daniela’) Itten (1894–1952), geb. Anbelang (∞10.9.1919–18.3.1938)
    Anneliese Itten, geb. Schlösser (∞22.4.1939)
  • Children Matthias (Matthis) (*12.6.1920)
    Marion (6.1941)
    Klaus (2.1944)
    Thomas (5.1946)

  • Professions Painter, Pedagogue

Between 1904 and 1906, Johannes Itten attended a teaching course in Hofwil near Bern. He worked as a primary school teacher from 1908 to 1909. That same year, he registered at the École des Beaux-Arts in Geneva and studied there until 1910. Until 1912, Itten completed another degree in natural science and mathematics at the University of Bern and received his diploma as a secondary school teacher. In the following two years, he studied at the Stuttgart Academy and became a member of Adolf Hölzel’s master students’ studio. In 1916, a first solo exhibition dedicated to Itten’s work was organised by Herwarth Walden at his gallery Der Sturm in Berlin. That same year, Itten relocated to Vienna and opened a private art school there.
In October 1919, Itten was appointed as one of the first masters at the Staatliches Bauhaus in Weimar by Walter Gropius. Until 1922/23, he was both director of the preliminary course which he had developed independently for the introductory semester and master of form of all the workshops except for the ceramic, bookbinding and printing workshops. Itten made a significant contribution to the Bauhaus by promoting the Mazdaznan cult, which spans religions and philosophies. After internal differences with Walter Gropius, Itten left the Bauhaus in March 1923.
Itten joined the international Mazdaznan temple community in Herrliberg on Lake Zurich. In 1926, he founded his own modern art school in Berlin. He was appointed to direct the newly established Höhere Fachschule für Textile Flächenkunst (Advanced School of Textile Art) in Krefeld in 1932. In 1934, the Itten school in Berlin was closed by the NSDAP. In 1937, Itten’s work was displayed at the exhibition ‘Entartete Kunst’ (degenerate art) in Munich. In the following year, he was dismissed from his post at the academy in Krefeld. Itten then moved to the Netherlands. In 1938, he became the director of the Kunstgewerbeschule (School of Applied Arts) and the Kunstgewerbemuseum (Museum of Applied Arts) in Zurich. In 1943, he also became director of the Textilfachschule (Textiles Achool) in Zurich. In 1949, he was commissioned to design the Rietberg Museum for non-European art in Zurich. He was invited to join the Ulm School of Design (HfG) by Max Bill in 1955. A number of large retrospectives of his work were held at, among others, at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam in 1957 and at the Kunsthaus Zürich in 1964.

  1. Literature:
  2. · Rolf Bothe et al. (1994): Das frühe Bauhaus und Johannes Itten, Ostfildern-Ruit.
    · Brigitte Salmen (2007): Bauhaus-Ideen − Um Itten, Feininger, Klee, Kandinsky: Vom Expressiven zum Konstruktiven, Murnau.
    · Christoph Wagner (2005): Das Bauhaus und die Esoterik: Johannes Itten, Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Bielefeld.
    · Ernest W. Uthemann (2003): Johannes Itten. Alles in Einem − alles im Sein, Ostfildern.

Johannes Itten

Novembergruppe

Bauhaus Weimar: Master and teacher

Period: 1.10.1919–31.3.1923
Main focus: Head of the Vorkurs (preliminary course) and form master

Textilfachschule Krefeld

Period: 1932–38

Hochschule für Gestaltung Ulm

Period: 1953

Landeskunstschule Hamburg

Period: 1954–56
Main focus: Guest Lecturer

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