For architects

Radio City Music Hall, Rockefeller Center

Art Deco

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In the 1920s a number of French designers promoted a style that made ornament modern. They turned their backs on traditional classical and Gothic...
Glenn Murcutt’s Ball-Eastaway House, Glenorie, NSW

Minimalism

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One of the most familiar interior design styles of recent decades is minimalism—plain walls, surfaces uninterrupted by ornament or moldings, zero clutter. Fashionable as...
Mies van der Rohe’s German Pavilion

The International Style

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The International Style was the name chosen to describe the modernist architecture of the 1920s and early 30s, when the work of architects such...
Bauhaus

Bauhaus

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The Bauhaus was a school of design, founded in Germany in 1919, that had a lasting influence on architecture and the design of all...
Monument to the Third International

Constructivism

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The Russian constructivist movement flourished briefly in the 1920s and 30s. Constructivist architects produced breathtaking modern designs, often glorying in unusual and innovative structures....
Schröder House, Utrecht

De Stijl

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Dutch architects were in the vanguard of modernism from 1910 to the end of the 1920s. Their De Stijl movement, which produced stunning white...
The Grosse Schauspielhaus, Berlin

Expressionism

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The expressionist movement had its heyday in Germany and the Netherlands in the 1920s. It brought dramatic new forms—curving walls and faceted domes, for...
Santa Maria Novella station, Florence

Futurism

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Italian futurism began as a movement of artists and writers and spread to architecture in the visionary work of Antonio Sant’Elia. Although he built...
Empire State Building

Skyscraper*

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Although the cathedral builders of the Middle Ages had known how to build tall towers and spires, the search for ways to build practical...
Welwyn Garden City

Garden city

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In the 1870s a number of landlords and social reformers began to design improved housing for ordinary people, creating spacious settlements with generous gardens...