Bauhaus, the art style of the '20s and '30s gave us some awesome designs in architecture — but it influenced furniture design, too. Here are some of the most wonderful examples.
A cradle, designed by Peter Keler in 1922
(via Antiqbook)
F51 Office Armchair, designed by Walter Gropius for his office at the Dessau Bauhaus
(via Bauhaus 2 Your House)
The WG 24 lamp (also known as the Wagenfeld Lampe), 1924, designed by Wilhelm Wagenfeld and Karl J. Jucker
(via Klassik Copenhagen)
Laccio Table, by Marcel Breuer, c. 1925
(via Knoll)
The Model B3 (also known as Wassily) Chair, designed by Marcel Breuer in 1925-1926
An unknown woman in a B3 chair, wearing a mask, designed by Oskar Schlemmer and a dress, designed by Herbert Beyer, c. 1926:
(via MoMA and Casa-Factory)
Nesting tables, designed by Josef Albers, 1926-1927
(via I Love Designer Furniture)
The LC4 (Chaise Longue or Long Chair), designed by Le Corbusier in 1928
(via Design Within Reach and Cassina)
Cesca C32 Cane Chair, designed by Marcel Breuer, 1928
(via Hivemodern)
The LC1 Villa Church, designed by Le Corbusier, 1928
(via Cassina)
Barcelona chair, designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Lilly Reich, 1929
(via Wikimedia Commons and moDecor Furniture)
A chair, designed by the Czech Jindrich Halabala in 1930
(via Zeitlos Berlin)
The Barcelona daybed, designed by Mies van der Rohe in 1930
(via Knoll)
A chrome-plated tubular steel couch from Germany, 1932
(via Zeitlos Berlin)
A cabinet designed by Bruno Weil for Thonet, 1932
(via Zeitlos Berlin)
A desk by Mücke-Melder Company, 1934
(via Zeitlos Berlin)
A Kienzle table clock, 1934
(via Zeitlos Berlin)
Steel armchairs by Mücke & Melder
(via Prague Art)
A tubular steel sideboard from 1935
(via Zeitlos Berlin)
A wardrobe, designed by the Czech Robert Slezák, produced in 1935
(via Zeitlos Berlin)
Short Chair, designed by Marcel Breuer, 1936
(via Victoria and Albert Museum)
A German dressing table from the mid-1930s
(via Zeitlos Berlin)
A drinks trolley by Zsuzsa Kozma, 1938-1939
(via Victoria and Albert Museum)
Bonus: Pendant light Berlin, in the style of German Modernism, from 2001
(via Zeitlos Berlin)
onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Bauhaus: Retro Futuristic Design of the 20th Century