Another mural in the school represents artist and assistant Bauhaus director Wassily Kandinsky's color theory, in which he gave students and other teachers the three primary colors (red, yellow, and blue), and three primary geometric shapes (triangle, square, and circle) and asked them to match each color to each shape and explain the reasoning behind it. Almost universally, the "answer" was a blue circle, yellow triangle, and a red square.  Search “Touring-Vitra-Campus-Part-1.html” from Touring the Weimar Bauhaus Campus

Search “Touring-Vitra-Campus-Part-1.html”

Another mural in the school represents artist and assistant Bauhaus director Wassily Kandinsky's color theory, in which he gave students and other teachers the three primary colors (red, yellow, and blue), and three primary geometric shapes (triangle, square, and circle) and asked them to match each color to each shape and explain the reasoning behind it. Almost universally, the "answer" was a blue circle, yellow triangle, and a red square.