-
Former 100m champion Kerley banned two years over whereabouts failures
-
Sabalenka opens Indian Wells bid with dominant win
-
Doris relieved Ireland's slim title hopes intact after 'scrappy' win over Welsh
-
Man City aren't a 'complete team' admits Guardiola
-
Arteta warns Arsenal to preserve reputation in Mansfield clash
-
PSG beaten by Monaco before Chelsea Champions League showdown
-
Timothee Chalamet taken to task over opera, ballet dig
-
Ireland keep title hopes alive in thrilling win over Wales
-
Hungary has not returned cash seized from bank workers, Kyiv says
-
Napoli secure first Serie A home win since January
-
Valverde strikes late as Real Madrid beat Celta Vigo
-
PSG beaten by Monaco ahead of Chelsea Champions League showdown
-
Liverpool tame Wolves to reach FA Cup quarter-finals
-
Kane-less Bayern brush aside Gladbach to continue title march
-
Berger extends lead midway through Arnold Palmer Invitational
-
Paralympics open with Russian athletes booed in ceremony
-
Cuba 'next' on agenda, after Iran: Trump
-
Zverev leads way into Indian Wells third round
-
NASA defense test kicked asteroid off course -- and changed its orbit around the sun
-
Anthropic vows court fight in Pentagon row
-
'Harder path': Obama attacks Trump at Jesse Jackson memorial
-
Amber Glenn says will not visit White House to celebrate Olympic gold
-
Russian athletes booed as they parade under own flag at Paralympics opening
-
Trump to attend return of six US troops killed in Iran war
-
Tom Brady flag football event moved from Saudi to Los Angeles: reports
-
UN chief slams 'unlawful attacks', says Mideast could spiral out of control
-
Middle East war a new shock for financial markets
-
Only nine commercial ships detected crossing the Hormuz Strait since Monday
-
Mexico unveils 100,000-strong security deployment for World Cup
-
Trump's Iran war violates international law, experts say
-
Swiss eyeing fewer F-35 fighters, reshaping defence set-up
-
UK police question three women in Al-Fayed probe
-
Oil prices surge as Mideast war rages, stocks fall on US jobs
-
Dupont says France must forget Six Nations title talk against Scotland
-
Voices from Iran: protests, fear and scarcity
-
Champions League ambitions encourage Barca gamble in Bilbao
-
This is how Ukraine has countered Russia's Iran-designed drones
-
Dybala out for six weeks as Roma battle for top-four spot
-
Sleepless Iranians count cost of war as damage mounts
-
Itoje tells faltering England to 'take the game to Italy' in Six Nations
-
Leading satellite firm to hold back Gulf state images
-
Tuipulotu urges Scotland to stay in Six Nations title hunt against France
-
Trump says only Iran's 'unconditional surrender' can end war
-
US releases Epstein files with uncorroborated Trump allegations
-
Securing shipping lane from Mideast war 'challenging', say experts
-
Italy have to start beating the best, says captain Lamaro
-
India's Bumrah only 'human' says Phillips ahead of T20 World Cup final
-
Oil prices climb as Mideast war rages, stocks fall on US jobs
-
US retail sales decline as consumer pullback deepens
-
War in Middle East raises stagflation fears in Europe and beyond
German far-right AfD takes aim at Bauhaus movement
Germany's far-right AfD party has aimed fire at the Bauhaus movement, just as the hallowed school of architecture and design nears its centenary milestone.
The Bauhaus movement of the 1920s, with its pioneering ethos of uniting form and function, redefined ideas about art, industrial design and building but was banned as "degenerate art" by the Nazis in 1933.
Now, as the campaign season heats up towards February 23 general elections, the Bauhaus style has been dragged into the latest culture war by the anti-immigration Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.
Ahead of the 100th anniversary of the Dessau Bauhaus school in 2025, the party has put forward a motion in the Saxony-Anhalt state parliament slamming the "simplistic glorification of Bauhaus heritage".
In a speech to the regional assembly, the AfD's Hans-Thomas Tillschneider charged that the Bauhaus style had "inspired architectural sins of crushing ugliness".
The party, usually more concerned with immigration and security than cultural issues, demanded a more "critical examination" of the style invented by architect Walter Gropius in Weimar in 1919.
Tillschneider blamed the Bauhaus school for inspiring grey concrete blocks in the former East Germany but said its influence could also be seen "in many West German cities".
- 'Vision of horror' -
Bauhaus pioneers were guided by the principle that "form follows function" and by the goal of creating objects and buildings with clean lines and no frills that are durable, affordable and aesthetically pleasing.
Their modernist ideas have left their mark on everything from teapots to tower blocks and Ikea furniture.
Bauhaus architects were also enlisted by East Germany's communist government to help build public housing, in a style using prefabricated concrete elements known as "Plattenbau".
Tillschneider said these buildings were "a vision of horror" and represented "a life in the smallest of spaces full of prohibitions and restrictions".
In the motion, the AfD also said the Bauhaus style sought to promote a "universal aesthetic" and an ideology with a "clear proximity to communism".
The motion was strongly rejected by all other parties and has been heavily criticised by representatives of the cultural sector.
Barbara Steiner, director of the Bauhaus Foundation in Dessau, said she had no objection to a "critical examination" of the movement.
"We want to do that too, and we're already doing it," she said.
After six years in Weimar, the Bauhaus school moved to Dessau in 1925 due to political pressure from the Nazis in Thuringia state.
Today, visitors to the Bauhaus campus in Dessau can learn about the history of the movement as well as how it has adapted to modern challenges such as climate change.
Steiner said the AfD's claims were "absurd" and failed to acknowledge the "progress" represented by the Plattenbau style.
"After the war, people moved into (these buildings) because they had hot water, a balcony and no leaks in the ceiling," she said.
- 'Attention-grabbing' -
Political scientist Natascha Strobl said the AfD's comments are unlikely to resonate with the German public because "no one is shocked by Bauhaus architecture any more".
But the inflammatory rhetoric could serve as a means of "attention-grabbing" without any risk of alienating voters since "the AfD doesn't get any votes from academia and culture anyway", she said.
Since the outbreak of the controversy, visitors to Dessau have become more curious about the history of the Bauhaus movement, according to Steiner.
After the Bauhaus school was banned in 1933, almost half of its 1,200 students left the country -- but 200 joined the Nazi party.
Fritz Ertl, 30, helped design the Auschwitz concentration camp, while fellow Bauhaus student Herbert Bayer sketched an Aryan "superman" for a Nazi propaganda poster.
"National Socialism wasn't just about tradition" but also about "strategically" incorporated elements of modernity, said Bauhaus art historian Anke Bluemm.
The AfD declined to comment on the controversy when contacted by AFP.
Steiner said the foundation had been in a "constructive" dialogue with local representatives of the party and was keen to continue the conversation.
"But this won't be the last we hear from them," she said, predicting a revival of the controversy ahead of the Dessau school's 100th anniversary in September.
M.Betschart--VB