Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Artist of the day, April 3: László Moholy-Nagy, Hungarian painter, designer, photographer

László Moholy-Nagy (1895-1946) is arguably one of the greatest influences on post-war art education in the United States. A modernist and a restless experimentalist from the outset, the Hungarian-born artist was shaped by Dadaism, Suprematism, Constructivism, and debates about photography. When Walter Gropius invited him to teach at the Bauhaus, in Dessau, Germany, he took over the school's crucial preliminary course, and gave it a more practical, experimental, and technological bent. He later delved into various fields, from commercial design to theater set design, and also made films and worked as a magazine art director. But his greatest legacy was the version of Bauhaus teaching he brought to the United States, where he established the highly influential Institute of Design in Chicago.

Moholy-Nagy believed that humanity could only defeat the fracturing experience of modernity - only feel whole again - if it harnessed the potential of new technologies. Artists should transform into designers, and through specialization and experimentation find the means to answer humanity's needs.

Moholy-Nagy's interest in qualities of space, time, and light endured throughout his career and transcended the very different media he employed. Whether he was painting or creating "photograms" (photographs made without the use of a camera or negative) or crafting sculptures made of transparent Plexiglass, he was ultimately interested in studying how all these basic elements interact.

© 2018. All images are copyrighted © by László Moholy-Nagy or assignee. The use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained.



1920-30, Der Schädel des Negerhäuptlings Makaua

1920-40. (Untitled)

1921, Yellow Circle detail

1923, Bauhaus Ausstellung Weimar

1923, Composition 2

1923, Composition from Masters' Portfolio of the Staatliches Bauhaus

1923, composition A XI

1923, Composition

1923, Q 1 Suprematistic

1923, QXXI

1923, Staatliches Bauhaus in Weimar

1923, Staatliches Bauhaus Weimar

1923, Untitled (Composition), ohne Titel (Komposition)) from the periodical Der Sturm, vol. 13, no. 1

1923, Untitled from Konstruktionen. Kestnermappe 6

1923, Untitled from Konstruktionen. Kestnermappe 6,2

1923, Untitled from Konstruktionen. Kestnermappe 6

1923-24, Composition No. 2

1923-24, Composition No. 4

1923-25, Untitled

1923-28, Bauen in Frankreich, Bauen in Eisen, Bauen in Eisenbeton

1924, Bauhausbücher 5

1924, Dream of Boarding School Girls

1924, Kompozicija Z VIII

1924-31, Bauhausbücher 11 (Bauhaus Books 11)

1925, Bauhausbücher

1925, composition A XXI

1925, Love Your Neighbor: Murder on the Railway

1925, Structure of the World

1925, The Law of Series

1925, Z II

1926, A Lightplay - Black White Gray

1926, A Lightplay- Black White Gray



1926, Composition

1926-31, Eine Zusammenfassung

1927, Bauhausbücher 8, Malerei, Fotografie, Film

1928, Bauhüttenarbeit

1928, Berlin

1928, Blick vom Funkturm

Die neue Linie, September 1929

1929, Großsiedlung e.V

1929, Wollen Sie ein eigenes Heim?

1930, Deutsche Messingwerke, Metallprofile für jeden Verwendungszweck

Die neue Linie, Februar 1930

Die neue Linie, Juni 1930

Die neue Linie, Dezember 1931

Die neue Linie, Mai 1931

Die neue Linie, Juli 1932

1932, Ortsgruppe Berlin, Film-Foto-Typographie

1935, Untitled

1935-36, The New Isokon Chair

1936, In the Cradle of the Deep

1936, Space Modulator L3

1936, telehor, Internationale Zeitschrift für optische Kultur

1936, Your Fare From This Station (Poster for London Transport)

1937, Bill of Fare, Gropius Dinner, March 9

1937, Quickly Away, Thanks To Pneumatic Doors

1942, Untitled

1946, Project For The Sculpture Bennett

Composition

No comments:

Post a Comment