Fröbel-Album. Emmy Boldt (cover title) and Weaving (cover title)
In the early nineteenth century, Friedrich Fröbel proposed
the radical notion that education, and early education in particular, was a
creative process, and that before setting foot in a customary schoolroom,
children ought to be grounded in self-expression and playfulness. The reality
of the proposition was the establishment of the kindergarten system and Fröbel’s
“gifts” and “occupations”. His gifts consisted of physical implements, such as
wood blocks and yarn, which students could manipulate and mutate. His occupations
required slightly more craftsmanship, involving the cutting, folding, and
pricking of paper and advancing through a series of skills including embroidery
and weaving. Both the gifts and the occupations offered avenues for play in
tandem with tasks to be mastered, wherein students received the rewards of
their own creativity.
During his lifetime, Fröbel’s ideas progressed throughout
Germany and the Netherlands, gathering the support of several royal proponents,
such as the Baroness Bertha Marie von Marenholtz-Bülow and the Duke of Meiningen.
Unfortunately, just before his death the Prussian government banned Fröbel’s
practices, citing them as “atheistic and demagogic”. Though the ban was more
the result of a confusion of names – Fröbel’s nephew had published an unwelcome
pamphlet on the education of women – the damage deterred the growth of
kindergarten education in Europe for fifteen years. Fröbel’s legacy instead
grew in the United States, where his former pupil, Margarethe Schurz, founded in
1856 the first American kindergarten and later inspired the educational
reformers Elizabeth Peabody and Lucy Wheelock. Fröbel occupations became
particularly popular in the Midwest, as exhibited by the two volumes pictured.
Students would compile albums of their work as a means to track their
competencies and display their creativity. Whereas the “Weaving” album shows a
single skill improved over time, the “Fröbel-Album” evinces a steady
progression through a variety of tasks completed with increasing skill.
These and other albums like them, in their invitation to
create something out of nothing and to repurpose common materials new fashions,
served as an inspiration for later abstract artistic movements. The Bauhaus
school took particular cues from Fröbel; Walter Gropius designed the Friedrich Fröbel Haus in his honor (the
building was never completed, but building plans can be viewed here).
Frank Lloyd Wright also noted Fröbel as a key influence, stating that his early
interactions building and rebuilding with a set of Fröbel gifts taught him the
basic elements of geometry and structure (Alofsin 359). Fröbel has made more
indirect impressions elsewhere in the creation and perpetuation of toys and
educational materials that encourage expression through manipulation, such as
LEGO blocks and Montessori sensorial materials.
(28032); (28055)
References:
Alofsin, Anthony. Frank
Lloyd Wright – The Lost Years, 1910-1922: A Study of Influence. (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1993).
Fröbel, Friedrich. Autobiography
of Friedrich Froebel. Translated by Emilie Michaelis and H. Keatley Moore.
(London: Swan Sonnenchein, 1908).
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