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Israel: a holy land for modern architecture

A new exhibition at the Barbican reveals how a Polish-born kibbutznik made the desert bloom — with Bauhaus

May 3, 2012 12:57
the medical school at Tel Aviv University

ByMelanie Abrams , Melanie Abrams

2 min read

When kibbutznik Arieh Sharon bought a book at Breslau train station on his way to architecture school in Berlin in 1925, it changed his life - and the architecture of Israel. For the book introduced Sharon to the new, radical Bauhaus philosophies of architect, Walter Gropius and artist Josef Albers, and inspired him to take the next train to their recently opened school in Dessau.

His subsequent Bauhaus training turned Sharon into one of Israel's most important architects. He laid the cornerstone of Tel Aviv's White City, the world's largest collection of Bauhaus buildings and a UNESCO World Cultural Heritage Site. He designed the central forum of the Haifa Technion, restored the pool of Hezekiah in Jerusalem and drew the plans for hospitals, universities and museums, including Yad Vashem. In 1962, he won the Israeli Prize for Architecture. According to Ariel Aloni, Sharon's grandson: "Bauhaus was the core of everything my grandfather did."

In 1948, David Ben Gurion appointed Sharon as Israel's first head of urban planning. His "Sharon Plan" sought to create kibbutzim and cities like Beersheva across the country to absorb future immigrants. "He was the right man at the right place in the right party [the leftist Mapai]," says Dr Michal Gross, director of Tel Aviv's Bauhaus Centre.

Now, as London's Barbican Art Gallery opens the biggest Bauhaus exhibition in the UK for over 40 years, and the White City plays a central role in Tel Aviv's current Year of Art, Sharon and his Bauhaus circle are back in the spotlight - with the Barbican show highlighting Sharon's close relationship with the school's leading players. Gropius, the director, enrolled him; Albers taught him; Gunta Stolzl, the head of the weaving workshop, married him. And Hannes Meyer, the controversial first head of the architectural department and later director, gave him his first big break, managing the complex construction of the ADGB building - the School for the German Confederation of Trade Union. "These live sites were how students got to test their skills and learning," says Catherine Ince, curator of the Barbican Art Gallery.