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''Pedagogical Sketchbook'' is a book by Paul Klee. It is based on his extensive lectures on visual form at Bauhaus Staatliche Art School where he was a teacher in between 1921-1931. Originally handwritten – as a pile of working notes he used in his lectures – it was eventually edited by Walter Gropius, designed by László Moholy-Nagy and published in 1925 as a Bauhaus student manual (Bauhausbucher No.2, as the second in the series of the fourteen Bauhaus books) under the original title: ''Pädagogisches Skizzenbuch''. It was translated into English by Sibyl Moholy-Nagy (in 1953), who also wrote an introduction for it. Along with other Bauhaus books such as ''Theory of Color'' (by Johannes Itten) and ''Point and Line to Plane'' (by Wassily Kandinsky), ''Pedagogical Sketchbook'' is a legacy of teaching methods on art theory and practice at Bauhaus Staatliche Art School. The book is still in print. == Background == During his teaching career at Bauhaus, Klee reflected on his own working methods and techniques. “When I came to be teacher”, he wrote, “I had to account explicitly for what I had been used to doing unconsciously.” 〔Giedion-Welcker: page 158.〕 He left over 3000 handwritten pages developed as a theoretical basis for his lectures, some of which are still unpublished. 〔http://www.zpk.org/ww/en/pub/web_root/act/wissenschaftliches_archiv/originaldokumente.cfm〕 From the same period comes another one of his books: ''The thinking Eye'', dealing with the same issues as ''Pedagogical Sketchbook'', but much more extensive in scope. However, this book was published and translated later, after his death (1956; trans. 1961). 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Pedagogical Sketchbook」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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