Walter Gropius was the man who founded the Bauhaus School in 1919 and  was director until  he stood down in 1928, when Hannes Meyer became  director. He was fired in 1930, and replaced by Ludwig Mies van der  Rohe, who was director until the schools close in 1933.
Gropius  was born in 1883 in Berlin. He studied architecture from 1903 until  1907. After this he worked in Peter Behrens' practice until 1910 when he  opened his own. Around this time he became a member of the Deutscher  Werkbund, a group whose aim was to promote creativity in design. He  founded the Bauhaus School in 1919 and was director until 1927. He  stayed in Europe and England until moving to America in 1937 to take up a  teaching position at Harvard. In 1938 he opened a joint practice with  Marcel Breuer. He died in Boston in 1969.
Meyer was born in 1889  in Switzerland. he took over as director of the Bauhaus school in 1928,  and it was under his Communist beliefs and influence that many of the  students followed, thus bringing unwanted political attention to the  school. He was fired as director in 1930 by the Mayor of Dessau. After  his sacking, he and several students formed a group whose projects  included architectual structures and urban planning projects. He  travelled a lot after this group was also forced to quit, but returned  to Switzerland where he died in 1954.
Mies was born in 1886 in  Germany. Before opening his own practice in 1912 he worked for several  years at the practice of Peter Behrens, and studied his craft. He  designed many buildings, including skyscrapers. He became the director  of the Bauhaus School in 1930 and stayed on until the school was forced  to close in 1933 by the new German Nazi Government. In 1937 he moved to  Chicago where he became the head of Architecture at the Illinois  Institute of Technology. He also later designed this Institutes new  campus, as well as many structures in his style of open space, steel and  glass. He died in Chicago in 1969.
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Bauhaus
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