ABSTRACT
This chapter explores aesthetic functionalism in the German Democratic Republic (GDR), primarily through philosopher Lothar Kühne’s ideas. In the shadow of socialist industrialization and mass housing programs, Kühne reimagined functionalism not as a style, but as a political-aesthetic program aimed at reshaping everyday life. Merging Marxist theory with architectural practice, he cast design as a medium of emancipation—where objects, spaces, and users co-evolve in a communist future. His approach challenged both technocratic formalism and decorative nostalgia. By tracing Kühne’s theory against the backdrop of 1970s cultural policy, this article shows how aesthetic functionalism embodied a radical, unfinished promise: that design could be both beautiful and politically transformative.
