Monday, October 9, 2017

Inventing Kindergarten: The Froebel Gifts

Friedrich Froebel



Friedrich Froebel



Friedrich Froebel



Friedrich Froebel



Friedrich Froebel



Friedrich Froebel


Better late than never -- I totally missed out as a youth. Shoot -- I could have been a contender...

Inventing Kindergarten 

This is the first comprehensive book about the original kindergarten, a revolutionary educational program for children that was invented in the 1830s by the charismatic German educator Friedrich Froebel (1782-1852) and grew to become a familiar institution throughout the world by the end of the nineteenth century. 

Using extraordinary visual material, it reconstructs the most successful system for teaching young children about art, design, mathematics, and natural history ever devised. Kindergarten -- a coinage of Froebel's combining the German words for children and garden -- involved not only nature study, singing, dancing, and storytelling, but also play with the so-called Froebel gifts -- a series of twenty educational toys, including building blocks, parquetry tiles, origami papers, modeling clay, sewing kits, and other design projects, that became wildly popular in the nineteenth century

Architect and artist Norman Brosterman tells the story of Froebel's life, explains his goals and educational philosophy, and -- most remarkably -- describes each of the gifts, illustrating them all, as well as many examples of art by nineteenth-century kindergarten teachers and children, and diagrams from long-forgotten kindergarten textbooks. 

In a section of the book devoted to the origin of abstract art and modern architecture, Brosterman shows how this vast educational program may have influenced the course of art history. Using examples from the work of important artists who attended kindergarten -- including Georges Braque, Piet Mondrian, Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Le Corbusier, among others -- he demonstrates that the design ideas of kindergarten prefigured modern conceptions of the aesthetic power of geometric abstraction.






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