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Walter Adolph Gropius
Walter Adolph Gropius
(1883 - 1969)
German-American architect and educator, who founded the Bauhaus, a German art school that became a seminal force in architecture and applied art during the first half of the 20th century.
From 1907 to 1910 he worked in the offices of the German pioneering functional architect Peter Behrens in Berlin. Working with Adolph Meyer, he designed the Fagus Works in Alfeld (1910-1911) and the office building for the Werkbund exhibition in Cologne (1914), which made his name known throughout Europe. After World War I he became director of two Weimar art schools. Reorganizing them in 1919 as the Staatliches Bauhaus (State Building School), he introduced a new approach to design education that emphasized the principle of uniting art and technology; students received a basic crafts training to gain an acquaintance with materials and processes. This method, which led to a heightened awareness of the realities of production, virtually revolutionized modern design. When the school was moved to Dessau in 1925, Gropius designed its buildings. They are marked by simplicity of shape, elimination of surface decoration, and the extensive use of glass.
Gropius resigned as director of the Bauhaus in 1928 to return to private practice. Opposed to the Nazi regime, he left Germany secretly in 1934, and after several years in England, he went to the United States to join the architecture faculty of Harvard University. As head of the department (1938-1952), he introduced the Bauhaus concepts and helped to shape a generation of American architects.