•History of The Bauhaus •Architecture •Painting •Printmaking/Graphic Art •Sculpture •Applied Arts •Bauhaus Legacy •Collections GEOMETRIC ABSTRACTION For a guide to concrete and non-objective art, see: Abstract Paintings: Top 100. ...
Walter Gropius in front of a house he designed, 1927. Photo by Ullstein Bild. The Bauhaus was a German art school which opened in 1919 and ran until 1933. The school was only open for fourteen years and graduated fewer than 500 students, but it revolutionized the ways in which we thin...
The Bauhaus, which operated as an influential school in Germany between 1919 and 1933 but lives on as a kind of aesthetic ideal, has its strongest associations with highly visual work, like textiles, graphic design, industr...
The Bauhaus was a school whose approach to design and the combination of fine art and arts and crafts proved to be a major influence on the development of graphic design as well as much of 20th century modern art. Founded by Walter Gropius in Weimar, Germany in 1919, the school moved to...
Organized by Tim Barringer and Geoff Kaplan, the conference “After the Bauhaus, Before the Internet: A History of Graphic Design Pedagogy” addressed the period from 1933, when Germany’s fascist regime closed the final Bauhaus location in Berlin, to the end of the twentieth century, when ...
Arts and Crafts Movement Bauhaus Design History of Furniture History of Interior Design Start today. Try it now Introduction to Textiles & the Textile Industry 10 chapters | 209 lessons Ch 1. Textile Basics Textiles | Definition, Manufacturing & Examples 3:23 What is a Textile Designer...
art and design. The Bauhaus existed from 1919 to 1933 and today the world considers it to be the home of the avant-guard of classical modern style in all fields of liberal and applied arts. The resonance of the Bauhaus can still be felt today, essentially characterizing the image of German...
Important architects in the history and development of the modernist movement in America, included a number of refugees from Europe, such as Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886-1969), Walter Gropius (1883-1969) the former director of the Bauhaus Design School, and Louis Kahn (1901-74). Other ...
The "Victorian armchair," often featuring high backs, padded arms, and intricate embellishments, became a defining piece of furniture for the period. The Modern Era: In the 20th century, functionalism and minimalism became prominent design principles. The "Bauhaus" movement, origina...
In 1957, a minimalist dress watch becomes an instant classic: the Bauhaus-inspired “Grafic” Collection testifies to DOXA’s aesthetic credentials. In 1967, the SUB is the first truly purpose-designed, professional-grade watch accessible to the growing community of sports divers. Developed in coop...