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Bauhaus 

Revolutionary school of art, architecture and design established by the pioneer modern architect Walter Gropius at Weimar in Germany in 1919. Its teaching method replaced the traditional pupil-teacher relationship with the idea of a community of artists working together. Its aim was to bring art back into contact with everyday life, and design was therefore given as much weight as fine art. The name is a combination of the German words for building (bau) and house (haus) and may have been intended to evoke the idea of a guild or fraternity working to build a new society. The Bauhaus moved to Dessau in 1925–6 where Gropius created a new building for it. In 1932 it moved to Berlin where it was closed by the Nazis. Teachers included Kandinsky, Klee, Moholy-Nagy and Albers. Its influence was immense, especially in the USA where Moholy-Nagy opened the New Bauhaus in Chicago in 1937. In 1933 Albers took its methods to Black Mountain College in North Carolina and in 1950 to Yale University.
 

Wassily Kandinsky, Swinging, 1925
Wassily Kandinsky
Swinging
1925
 
László Moholy-Nagy, K VII, 1922
László Moholy-Nagy
K VII
1922
 
Josef Albers, Study for Homage to the Square: Departing in Yellow, 1964
Josef Albers
Study for Homage to the Square: Departing in Yellow
1964