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1940s
1950s
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1930s
Black Mountain College was an experimental
college located near Asheville, North Carolina. Founded in the fall of
1933 by John Andrew Rice, Theodore Dreier and other faculty who had been
fired or resigned from Rollins College the previous spring, the college
sought to educate the whole student – head, heart and hand – through
studies, the experience of living in a small community and manual work.
Although
the founders - in a truly experimental spirit - did not wish to bind the
college to a rigidly codified educational doctrine, they did have strong
feelings and ideas about education. The college was to be owned and
operated by the faculty. A Board of Fellows made up of faculty and one
student formed the central governing body. An Advisory
Board lent counsel to the community but had no legal authority. Decisions
were based on consensus rather than a vote. Academic bookkeeping –
grades and quality points – as a measure of an education were abolished
(though grades were recorded for transfer purposes). Graduation was based
on achievement of a project in the student’s area of specialization
along with examinations – both written and oral – by the faculty and
an outside examiner. Students, faculty and families ate in a common dining
hall. Although there were cooks and other service personnel for those
tasks requiring continuous attention, most of the general maintenance of
the campus was performed by students and faculty. The arts were central to
the educational experience rather than on the periphery.
For the first eight years, the college rented
the Blue Ridge Assembly buildings located south of the village of Black
Mountain. The main building with its three-story-high wooden columns, wide
porch with a magnificent view of surrounding mountains, large gathering
hall and plentiful rooms symbolized the vision of community which the
college sought to embody. John Andrew Rice, Southerner, visionary, and
iconoclast dominated college life. Classes were held in the mornings and
evenings. Work program and other activities took place in the afternoon.
For entertainment there was after dinner dancing during the week and
parties, plays and concerts by community members on weekends. The
surrounding Blue Ridge Mountains provided a natural setting for excursions
and afternoon hikes. Dress was informal during the day although everyone
dressed for dinner and in formal attire (long skirts and suits) on
Saturday night. In the first year Norman Weston, a student, started a farm. Community
meetings were often combative and seemingly interminable as issues
concerning educational policy and daily activities were debated with equal
passion.
In 1933, the college brought Josef Albers,
artist and former Bauhaus teacher, and his wife Anni Albers, a
Bauhaus-trained textile designer and weaver, to teach. With their arrival,
the college became a unique center for the transmission of Bauhaus
teaching and philosophy. The presence of refugee artists and scholars was
critical to the learning experience at Black Mountain throughout its
history.
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