The Logic of the Sign: Baudrillard, Bauhaus, and the Transformation of the Object
Wassily Chair. AI image Introduction Jean Baudrillard’s analysis of consumer society offers a powerful framework for understanding how everyday objects acquire meaning beyond their practical function or market price. Central to his work is the distinction between different “logics” of value— use-value , exchange-value , symbolic exchange , and sign-value . Among these, the logic of the sign marks a decisive shift: objects are no longer primarily valued for what they do or what they cost, but for what they signify within a structured system of differences. This perspective can be productively brought into dialogue with modernist design, particularly the work of the Bauhaus in Dessau. Although Bauhaus designers sought to reduce objects to their functional essence, their project also reveals a deeper tension: the attempt to break with bourgeois aesthetics ultimately contributes to the emergence of new forms of signification. The Wassily Chair offers a particularly illuminating exampl...