The Brutalist is about an architect who studied at the Bauhaus.
Its protagonist is fictional, but the Bauhaus was real.
What was it? The most influential design school in history.
So, from fonts to furniture, this is how Bauhaus created the aesthetic of the modern world...
During the 19th century architecture, art, and design were all about the past.
This was the age of Revivalism — everything was built or designed in historical styles.
And it was also a maximalist age: decoration, detail, colour, and ornamentation were in fashion.
The first rebellion against Revivalism was Art Nouveau — literally "New Art" in French.
It emerged in Belgium in the 1890s and soon took over the world.
This was a new style not chained to the past, a luxurious aesthetic defined by flowing lines and natural forms.
But, by the end of WWI, Art Nouveau was finished.
A new movement rose up to take its place: Art Deco.
Gone were the flowing curves. This was an aesthetic of straight lines, bold angles, and machine-like geometry — futuristic, decadent, dramatic, exciting.
But the days of Art Deco were numbered.
The world was changing: industrialisation, globalisation, rising populations, and constant new inventions... electricity, cars, radio, cinema, reinforced conrete, and so much more.
Could the old ways of design adapt to this new world?
Well, back in the early 1900s a radical architect called Adolf Loos had been causing trouble in Vienna.
He designed buildings without any ornamentation whatsoever — absolutely clean and stripped back.
And in 1910 he delivered a lecture called "Ornament and Crime", saying this:
Loos realised that new technologies were dragging the world into an era of standardisation.
When people make things by hand they instinctively decorate them — and we had been making literally everything by hand since the dawn of civilisation.
The opposite of standardised.
But this tradition belonged to a world of artisans and craftsmen — not one of machines.
In other words: Art Nouveau and Art Deco design were not suitable for mass-production.
Hence Loos argued for the use of pure and unornamented materials instead.
Loos influenced a generation of others who were, like him, anxious to find a new aesthetic adapted to the Industrial World.
One of them was a Swiss called Le Corbusier, who went on to become the most influential architect of the 20th century.
He said this about Art Deco...
There was also the Bauhaus, a design school set up in Germany in 1919.
Walter Gropius was its leader and other members included the likes of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Marcel Breuer.
Their campus in Dessau, designed by Gropius and opened in 1926, embodies their beliefs.
The Bauhaus' goal was to find an aesthetic suited to mass-production and standardisation, not only in architecture but across all design, from furniture to fonts.
Thus they used steel, plastic, and board instead of the stained glass, bronze, and hardwood of Nouveau or Deco.
There was beauty in clean surfaces and unornamented materials, as Loos said — and the Bauhaus proved it.
They created simple and functional objects with tubular steel, board, and plastic, whether chairs or lamps or chess sets.
A sleek, thrillingly modern, industrial aesthetic.
The world is now filled with minimalism, plastic, and chrome — but once upon a time it wasn't.
Something like this doorhandle, designed by Walter Gropius, looks like our standard modern aesthetic.
But at the time this sort of thing was, strange as it sounds, revolutionary.
In 1922 a competition was held to design the Tribune Tower in Chicago.
A Neo-Gothic design by Raymond Hood won — a sign of the times.
But unsuccessful designs submitted by Loos, Gropius, and several other aspiring modernists were a sign of things to come.
The first architectural test of this new movement was an exhibition held in Stuttgart in 1927.
Its aim was to show that modern architecture could provide cheap, healthy, and high quality housing for workers.
Gropius and Breuer, along with Le Corbusier, designed houses for it.
To us, in 2025, the Weissenhof Estate looks utterly ordinary — but that is precisely because Bauhaus was so influential.
Still, if they were outsiders and radicals in the 1920s, an age dominated by Art Deco and the final stages of Revivalism, how did they change the world?
The flashpoint was WWII — and the rise of Nazism.
In 1933 the Nazi regime shut down the Bauhaus, accusing them of degeneracy and communist leanings.
So they fled — taking their ideas with them — eventually arriving in the USA, where Gropius, Mies, and Breuer all settled.
After the war the world needed to both rebuild and accomodate the growing global population... but how?
Bauhaus had already found a solution.
Using concrete and steel and glass, absolutely functional and unornamented, we could build quickly and cheaply and at scale.
And so by the 1950s Bauhaus architecture (known as the "International Style") had conquered the world.
It's hard to imagine how exciting and futuristic this style must have seemed at first, standing out among cities filled with the creaking and cluttered stone buildings of old.
So the Bauhaus triumph was several decades in the making; but, in the end, it was unstoppable.
They sensed the future and created a minimalist, functionalist, industrial aesthetic for it — the aesthetic of our modern world, whether of crockery or skyscrapers or anything else.
Even typefaces and fonts were reshaped by the Bauhaus and their ideas about minimalism and functionalism.
Although Sans Serif typefaces go back to the 19th century, it was only after Bauhaus that they became truly popular.
This font you are reading is itself Sans Serif.
The minimalist design of Apple, the plethora of flat-pack furniture, IKEA... these are all children of the Bauhaus.
Adolf Loos once said: "I have emerged the victor: I have liberated humanity from superfluous ornamentation."
Little could he have known how right he was.
But not all minimalism is equal.
Those Bauhaus designers were aesthetic masters, and most things created since are not so elegantly designed.
The world has been filled with careless, knock-off minimalism — it feels cheap rather than stylish, boring instead of sleek.
Bauhaus emerged in a maximalist world and it has ushered in an Age of Minimalism — they successfully found an aesthetic suited to mass-production.
But now we are saturated with it, the excitement has worn off, and its quality is degrading.
Has minimalism run its course?
Perhaps people now long for detail, as a century ago we longed for simplicity. Could maximalism make a comeback? Is it even possible?
The pendulum of fashion always swings one way, then another, and each generation reacts to what came before... so what is the future of design?
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Mont-Saint-Michel in France is one of the most famous places in the world.
You've seen thousands of photos of it... but what is Mont-Saint-Michel? Who built it? And when?
This is a brief history of the world's strangest village...
First — where is it?
Mont-Saint-Michel (which is the name of the island, the village, and the abbey) is a tidal island off the coast of Normandy, in northern France.
"Tidal" means that it is surrounded by sea or by land depending on the tides.
Legend says that during the 8th century a bishop called Autbert of Avranches had a dream in which the Archangel Saint Michael told him to build a shrine on the island.
The Archangel Michael, who defeated Satan in battle, was a popular saint at the time.
This unusual house in Turin was built 123 years ago.
It's the perfect example of a kind of architecture unique to Italy, known as the "Liberty Style".
How to make ordinary buildings more interesting? The Liberty Style has an answer...
During the 1890s there was an artistic and architectural revolution in Europe: Art Nouveau.
It means "New Art" in French, and that's exactly what it was — a whole new approach to design, whether of buildings, furniture, clothes, sculpture, or crockery.
There were many genres of Art Nouveau, but what they had in common was a commitment to traditional craftsmanship, the embrace of new materials like iron, and a turn toward flowing designs inspired by nature.
Like the Hôtel Tassel in Brussels, designed by Victor Horta, from 1893:
It's by Grant Wood (most famous for American Gothic) and it's called The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere.
Why does it look like that? Because Grant Wood had one of the most unusual styles in art history...
Grant Wood was born in 1891 in rural Iowa; ten years later the family moved to Cedar Rapids.
He worked at a metal shop, studied at arts and crafts schools in Minneapolis and Chicago, and then became a public school art teacher back in Cedar Rapids.
Humble beginnings.
In the 1920s, while working as a teacher, Wood made several trips to Europe, including a year studying at the Académie Julian in Paris.
There, like so many artists of his generation, he adopted a generic and basically unremarkable Impressionist style:
This is Mount Nemrut in Turkey, one of the strangest ancient ruins in the world.
It's a colossal, 2,000 year old burial mound on top of a mountain, surrounded by huge stone heads.
Who built it? A king who wanted to become a god...
First, where is Mount Nemrut?
It's in the Taurus Mountains, a range in south-eastern Turkey. And, rising to more than 2,000 metres, it's one of the tallest mountains in the region.
It was part of the ancient Kingdom of Commagene, a small state that fought both with and against the Roman Republic, and eventually became part of the Roman Empire.
The tomb-temple at Mount Nemrut was built in 62 BC, when Commagene was an independent kingdom.
In Medieval Europe landscape painting wasn't a genre of its own, and it hardly featured in art at all.
Notice how the background of this 11th century mural indicates the landscape merely by the generic sketch of a castle and an isolated, highly stylised tree:
This changed in the 14th century with Giotto, a revolutionary painter from Florence.
He introduced proper landscapes into his paintings: rocks, trees, flowers, and skies.
But Giotto's version of nature remains highly stylised; this is not a "realistic" landscape.