What is Bauhaus?
The Bauhaus was a German art school opened in 1919, by the architect Walter Gropius, originally in Weimar. It was a school where
students were free to express themselves and push the concepts of art and functionality to their absolute limit. Bauhaus promotes functionality over look; the most important part of a design is how well it works, anything that doesn't serve to amplify it's use is unnecessary and should be removed. Throughout its lifetime, the Bauhaus existed in three different cities: Weimar, Dessau, and Berlin. Finally, in 1933, it was closed down by the Nazi regime for being a centre for "Communist Intellectualism."
