Carl Aubock: The Workshop
Book Details
PublisherpowerHouse Books
ISBN / ASIN1576876152
ISBN-139781576876152
Sales Rank216,854
CategoryArt
MarketplaceGermany 🇩🇪
Description
The Werkstatte (Workshop) Carl Aubock was founded in the 19th century--one of many workshops in Vienna specializing in bronze-casting. However, Carl Aubock II (1900-1957) was one of the very few Viennese students who attended the Bauhaus in post-World War I Weimar, and when he returned to the Workshop he brought inspiration from this new design movement. Expert craftsmanship and superior quality materials such as hand-sewn leather, polished bronze, and various woods became the signature of the Bauhaus-inspired Aubock Workshop and many of their whimsical, modernist designs stand out as prescient objets d'art. Carrying on generations of the Workshop tradition, son Carl Aubock III (1924-1993) and grandson Carl Aubock IV (born 1954) were instrumental in forging ahead with new ideas and designs while preserving the quality craftsmanship and integrity of the Workshop which today remains among the last of its kind. Despite designing over 6,000 original objects and pieces of furniture in the early to mid-20th century, Aubock somehow has eluded the spotlight and the Workshop's products remain cult objects of desire, cherished quietly by design greats and savvy collectors. More incredibly, only one quarter of the Workshop's designs have been documented, leaving an astounding 4,000 objects yet to be "discovered." "Carl Aubock: The Workshop" documents hundreds of signature Workshop objects culled from exclusive private collections, and brings us into the Workshop itself with contemporary photographs, interviews with Carl Aubock IV, and historical documents and photographs depicting the Workshop's historic legacy. ..".The strange and luminous world of the Viennese designer Carl Aubock (1900-57). A master of elemental materials like brass, leather, wood and horn, Aubock had a flair for exquisitely turned curios--paperweights, corkscrews, pipe holders--that still exert a magnetic pull... His larger works--Nakashima-like free-edge wooden tables with spindly brass legs, leather-slin

