The Bauhaus, can we stick a kilt on it?

Dougie Muego (first published in 2017 and revised January 2026)

The Bauhaus- Walter Gropius 1926

Gropius was also the founder of the Bauhaus at Weimar in1920

Mies van der Rohe was its last director from 1930 to 1933.

Dessau-Rosslau, south of Berlin

the bauhaus entrance

The name

The first Bauhaus school was established in Weimar in 1920. It occupied a building designed by Henry van der Velde where, from 1907 until the outbreak of the first World War, Van der Velde sought to reform design and handicraft and architecture teaching. When the school transferred to Dessau, Walter Gropius designed a purpose built school in1926. It was variously a Design, Architecture and Craft School with an evolving curriculum partly caused by political pressure. There was a focus on Design for Industry. The location of the Bauhaus in Dessau was because Dessau saw itself as an aspiring industrial city, thought to have good prospects for new designers. Dessau was also located in an area of similar towns forming the central German Industrial Zone,  also an area of new industries, south of Berlin.

The Building itself has stylistic connections with Gropius’s other work (Site examples The Fagus shoe factory, the Haus am Horn, Gropius house) and with the International Modernist movement in architecture.

Both Mies and Walter Gropius were members of the Deutscher Werkbund, a movement in Art and Design in Germany which had seen explosive growth prior to WW1. It had also evolved from its late 19th Cent origins as a craft guild with a strong Gothic influence-similar to the Arts and Crafts movement in the UK, with its emphasis on individual hand crafted production. By the early 1920s, all be it with strong disagreement from some members, it had become a strong advocate of designing for industry- Industrial Design as we know it today. This change in approach also took place in the Bauhaus at about the same time. Almost co-incident to the building of the Bauhaus, the 1927 Werkbund exhibition at the Weissenhof Siedlung in Stuttgart explored an important theme – “Die Wohnung (How Should We Live? The Dwelling)” It looked at how people lived, what sort of housing was most suitable for them, how these ideas were evolving. It was one of a number of Werkbund exhibitions during the 1920s and is an example of how active, powerful and well organised the Werkbund was at the time of the building of the Bauhaus. Because of this, and its good professional reputation, it was able to draw on the services of some the best and most influential designers, architects and artists when it came to appointing teaching staff at the Bauhaus.

The building

The complex layout of the Bauhaus sits on fairly flat ground in a generous grassy area. It has a flat roof and is of steel, glass and concrete construction.

For the most part the building is set out in distinct blocks with three floors over a more rustic ground floor/basement. One wing has five floors over a ground basement floor. These blocks are linked by access corridors.

corridor

Corridor

An unexpected bonus is the vistas which open out as you walk up the stairs and rise up through the building.

These inside/ outside views give you a powerful sense of integration, of being part of the building as you go through it. The famous name is spelled out vertically in white on a grey facade.

upper landing view
foyer and staircase
studio space

The interior surfaces are white, grey and occasionally black. The studio spaces can be spartan and much less glamorous than the facades. There are occasional red accents both inside and out. The crisply detailed reception area has a buff floor. You can catch an occasional glimpse of a studio space as you go round.

There’s that famous theatre to see and the building has a very good cafeteria- its well worth a visit!

theatre doorway

exterior view

The Bauhaus shows what a superb architect Gropius could be. Visiting the building is a wow! To move through the building is to be delighted by each aspect you see. Its so good, so well done. For the building is a tour de force, it has a great presence, and a strong sense of mass and order.

Its a big statement visually and the overall effect is of carefully integrated materials forming harmonious facades to all elevations.

An obvious difference with more recent buildings is the size and number of panes of glass which make up an individual glazing area and the noticeable black glazing bars which give a rich articulation to the large glass facades. Drama comes from contrasting these facades with white concrete.

glass facade

the teaching

The influence of the Bauhaus on design education has been very important. A unified art, craft, and technology syllabus was taught at the Bauhaus. There were  artists, designers and architects teaching there. They understood that “It’s all one big sea we swim in” when it comes to Art and Design. Each discipline needs the other.

For all students, both then and today, coming to terms with that is part of Art or Design’s great beauty and its difficulty when learning.

course diagram

The Bauhaus as a Design School only operated until 1932.

The Nazi Party was rising in power in Germany and when they took control of Dessau city council, they forced the then Director, Mies Van Der Rohe, to close the school. He then moved to a factory in Berlin, but was unable to continue there. The Bauhaus closed for good in Germany in1933, and Mies dispersed the students and teaching staff.

This act helped to spread the ideas and influence of the Bauhaus throughout Europe and the wider world. A few came to the UK, built a little, and stayed until the outbreak of war. They then moved to America and post-war, in the USA, the New Bauhaus or Second Chicago school was founded.

In Tel Aviv, there is the “The White city of Tel Aviv”, a very large collection of modernist buildings built by German Jewish architects who emigrated to Palestine after the rise of the Nazis.

Even as far away as Australia, a school was established for a time teaching Bauhaus methods.

The building itself survived the Second World War, but fell into a dilapidated condition. The Communist GDR then operated it as a reorganised Design and Architecture School but not linked to Gropius’s thinking and two restorations took place. Since 1974 the Bauhaus has been the home of “Bauhaus Dessau Foundation”, and teaching continues. Post-graduate programmes have been run there since 1979, and you can visit the building. Associated with the building are a number of “Masters Houses” in a small building development nearby. They have been restored or partly reconstructed and it is also possible to visit them.

Its success in giving its students an understanding of how to to design for production using modern materials is well known. Some of the best known examples of work associated with the Bauhaus are in the field of modern design.

A much employed material was tubular steel. These chairs are examples of its furniture design.

Marcel Breuer chair
cesca chair-Marcel Breuer

It is also well known for teaching typography, and for being a centre of excellence in Graphic Design. Herbert Bayer designed the image below.

The course was also surprisingly modern in other ways, as well as wide ranging, extending to discrete elements on such unusual and modern topics as Film and Photography, dance, theatre design- including costume. It was this broad and thorough approach which equipped it’s students to succeed in modern life.

Conclusion and relevance

I wrote this piece in 2017 and since then the world has become a much more uncertain, difficult and dangerous place. But the Bauhaus was created and existed during a more turbulent and chaotic Germany. Those in charge then chose to seek opportunity rather than surrender to doubt. Their work speaks for them, beautiful, engaging, looking to the future, not the past,

This raises a question for us in Scotland. I’m talking about the aspect of social need in the production of objects for consumption. Too often production is described as good if it merely makes profits or creates jobs. That is not nearly enough. How we live, design and make is just as important today as it was 100 years ago. Today in Scotland we can choose to aspire, to dream of a better tomorrow, we will want our rights respected, and our needs met as far as it is possible to do so. The goals of our educational institutions similarly need to be addressed for they are the engine of desire which will power this transformation in social achievement. The model of the Bauhaus, often misunderstood, is that it successfully harnessed the energy and the opportunities of its times. We see the fruits of this labour, but not the nourishment which preceded it.

Those responsible for the Art, Design and Architecture in Scotland should consider this model of nourishment, care and development. How have creative people been invited to provide a vision for a better future? With Glasgow School of Art still a burnt out shell after a failed attempt at repair after a previous fire, it’s a legitimate question to ask. Given the energy generated during the 2014 referendum campaign and the continuing expression by many for a better Scotland since then, how can that desire for a better life be supported and encouraged through design and architecture?

Shall we be more ambitious? For then as now, the question is “How shall we live?”

The admission of social concerns into design teaching, and their expression as either architecture or designed objects, raises a question for or us in Scotland. I’m talking about the aspect of social need in the production of objects for consumption. Too often production is described as good if it merely makes profits or creates jobs. That is not nearly enough. How we live, design and make is just as important today as it was more than 100 years ago. Today in Scotland we choose to aspire, to dream of a better tomorrow, where all the citizens of our country have their rights respected, and their needs met as far as it is possible to do so. The goals of our educational institutions similarly need to be addressed for they are the engine of desire which will power this transformation in social achievement. The model of the Bauhaus, often misunderstood, is that it successfully harnessed the energy and the opportunities of it’s times. We see the fruits of this labour, but not always the nourishment and creative community effort which preceded it and was linked to it.

 

 

Leave a Reply