The interdisciplinary and experimental educational ideas espoused by Black Mountain College (BMC), founded in North Carolina in 1933, made it one of the most innovative schools in the first half of the twentieth century. Visual arts, economics, physics, dance, architecture, and music were all taught here on an equal footing, and teachers and students lived together in a democratically organized community. The first rector of the school was John Andrew Rice, and Josef Albers, John Cage, Walter Gropius, and Buckminster Fuller were among the many adepts to give courses here. In consequence, BMC witnessed the development of a range of avant-garde concepts. This richly illustrated book appears in conjunction with the Black Mountain exhibition. It is the first comprehensive publication on BMC in the German-speaking world and traces the key moments in the history of this legendary school.

Text: Gabriele Brandstetter, Brenda Danilowitz, Arnold Dreyblatt, Fabienne Eggelhöfer, Matilda Felix, Mary Emma Harris, Gabriele Knapstein, Annette Jael Lehmann, Catherine Nichols, Andi Schoon, Craig Schuftan, Alice Sebrell

Odette - Benoît Le Boulicaut
Rupture (fragments) - Benjamin Monti, Jean-Charles Andrieu de Levis
Notre condition. Essai sur le salaire au travail artistique – Aurélien Catin
L'arum tacheté de J-M. Bertoyas
Pectus Excavatum - Quentin Yvelin
Gruppen n°13 - Collectif
Slow Down Abstractions - Adrien Vescovi
Espaces intermédiaires - Éliane Radigue et Julia Eckhardt
Sakae Osugi – Anarchiste japonais – Ville de St-Denis 1923 - Katja Stuke, Oliver Sieber
Instructional Photography: Learning How to Live Now - Carmen Winant 

















