Walter Gropius and the Bauhaus Manifesto
An in-depth analysis of Gropius's foundational 1919 manifesto and how it reshaped modern architectural education and practice.
The Bauhaus was a German art school operational from 1919 to 1933 that combined crafts and fine arts, and became famous for its approach to design. It influenced the development of architecture, graphic design, interior design, industrial design, and typography.
An in-depth analysis of Gropius's foundational 1919 manifesto and how it reshaped modern architectural education and practice.
How Moholy-Nagy's experimental approach to typography and photograms bridged art, technology, and industrial design.
Exploring the tubular steel chair that became an icon of modernism and redefined domestic furniture manufacturing.
A chronological account of the school's forced closure in 1933 and the diaspora of its faculty across Europe and America.
How Albers transformed textile arts into a respected discipline within modernist design through geometric abstraction.
Navigate the restored Gropius masterpiece through high-resolution 360Β° imagery and architectural floor plans.