The Bauhaus School: Form Follows Function
Founded by Walter Gropius, the Bauhaus movement revolutionized 20th-century design by merging fine arts, crafts, and technology under one pedagogical roof.
Explore the evolution of visual culture, architectural paradigms, and industrial aesthetics. From the geometric rigor of Bauhaus to the fluid expressiveness of Art Nouveau, discover how design movements shaped—and continue to shape—the modern world.
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Founded by Walter Gropius, the Bauhaus movement revolutionized 20th-century design by merging fine arts, crafts, and technology under one pedagogical roof.
Emerging in the 1920s, Art Deco celebrated modernity through bold geometric patterns, luxurious materials, and streamlined forms that defined skyscrapers to jewelry.
Before the machine took over, designers looked to vines, flowers, and flowing lines. Art Nouveau brought organic elegance to ironwork, posters, and interior spaces.
Reacting against minimalist modernism, postmodern designers embraced historical references, playful typography, and deliberate visual complexity.
From Mies van der Rohe's architectural mantra to Apple's interface design, minimalism strips away the non-essential to reveal clarity, function, and quiet beauty.
Challenging stability and symmetry, deconstructivist architecture and design embrace fragmentation, controlled chaos, and nonlinear visual narratives.