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Attracted by the visionary ideas of Walter Gropius, and the promise of a new world order following the First World War, Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack was among the first students of the Weimar Bauhaus in 1919. He thrived in the atmosphere of creative freedom and artistic experimentation - but fell victim to the suppression of such ideals with the rise of Nazi Germany and the closure of the Bauhaus. Self-exile from Germany in 1936, and enforced separation from loved ones, became mandatory detention in Australia as an enemy alien. Unexpectedly, it was in Australia that he found peace and fulfilment as a teacher at Geelong Grammar School and in the company of family, old and new. Riveting, inspiring and deeply moving, this book is a culmination of two decades of research, drawing on extensive private family archives and oral histories. For the first time, it reveals the full details of Hirschfeld-Mack’s extraordinary life as so much more than a Bauhaus artist - teacher, musician, inventor, performer and pacifist - a man of compassion and resilience. Ultimately, his story is a plea for creativity and enterprise, and a stirring testament to our common humanity.
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Attracted by the visionary ideas of Walter Gropius, and the promise of a new world order following the First World War, Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack was among the first students of the Weimar Bauhaus in 1919. He thrived in the atmosphere of creative freedom and artistic experimentation - but fell victim to the suppression of such ideals with the rise of Nazi Germany and the closure of the Bauhaus. Self-exile from Germany in 1936, and enforced separation from loved ones, became mandatory detention in Australia as an enemy alien. Unexpectedly, it was in Australia that he found peace and fulfilment as a teacher at Geelong Grammar School and in the company of family, old and new. Riveting, inspiring and deeply moving, this book is a culmination of two decades of research, drawing on extensive private family archives and oral histories. For the first time, it reveals the full details of Hirschfeld-Mack’s extraordinary life as so much more than a Bauhaus artist - teacher, musician, inventor, performer and pacifist - a man of compassion and resilience. Ultimately, his story is a plea for creativity and enterprise, and a stirring testament to our common humanity.