July 06, 2016

LASZLO MOHOLY-NAGY’S RETROSPECTIVE: FUTURE PRESENT AT SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM

A


LASZLO MOHOLY-NAGY’S RETROSPECTIVE: FUTURE PRESENT AT
SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM NEW YORK
May 27, 2016 - September 7, 2016




LASZLO MOHOLY-NAGY’S RETROSPECTIVE: FUTURE PRESENT AT
SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM NEW YORK
May 27, 2016 - September 7, 2016 
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum will present the first comprehensive retrospective in the United States in nearly fifty years of the work of pioneering artist and educator László Moholy-Nagy (1895–1946). Organized by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Moholy-Nagy: Future Present examines the full career of the utopian modernist who believed in the potential of art as a vehicle for social transformation, working hand in hand with technology. Despite Moholy-Nagy’s prominence and the visibility of his work during his lifetime, few exhibitions have conveyed the experimental nature of his work, his enthusiasm for industrial materials, and his radical innovations with movement and light. This long overdue presentation, which encompasses his multidisciplinary methodology, brings together more than 300 works drawn from public and private collections across Europe and the United States, some of which have never before been shown publicly in this country. After its debut presentation in New York, the exhibition will travel to the Art Institute of Chicago (October 2, 2016–January 3, 2017) and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (February 12–June 18, 2017).  
Moholy-Nagy: Future Present is co-organized by Carol S. Eliel, Curator of Modern Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Karole P. B. Vail, Curator, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum; and Matthew S. Witkovsky, Richard and Ellen Sandor Chair and Curator, Department of Photography, Art Institute of Chicago. The Guggenheim presentation is organized by Vail, with the assistance of Ylinka Barotto, Curatorial Assistant, and Danielle Toubrinet, Exhibition Assistant.  
Moholy-Nagy: Future Present provides an opportunity to examine the full career of this influential Bauhaus teacher, founder of Chicago’s Institute of Design, and versatile artist who paved the way for increasingly interdisciplinary and multimedia work and practice. Among his radical innovations were his experiments with cameraless photographs (which he dubbed “photograms”); use of industrial materials in painting and sculpture that was unconventional for his time; researching with light, transparency, and movement; his work at the forefront of abstraction; and his ability to move fluidly between the fine and applied arts. The exhibition is presented chronologically up the Guggenheim’s rotunda and features collages, drawings, ephemera, films, paintings, photograms, photographs, photomontages, and sculptures. The exception to the sequential order is Room of the Present (Raum der Gegenwart) in the High Gallery, a contemporary fabrication of a space originally conceived by Moholy-Nagy in 1930 but never realized in his lifetime. Constructed by designers Kai-Uwe Hemken and Jakob Gebert, the largescale work contains photographic reproductions, films, slides, documents, and replicas of architecture, theater, and industrial design, including a 2006 replica of his kinetic Light Prop for an Electric Stage (Lichtrequisit einer elektrischen Bühne, 1930). Room of the Present illustrates the artist’s belief in the power of images and his approach to the various means with which to view them- a highly relevant paradigm in today’s constantly shifting and evolving technological world. Room of the Present will be on display at all three exhibition venues and for the first time in the United States. The Guggenheim installation is designed by Kelly Cullinan, Senior Exhibition Designer, and is inspired by Moholy-Nagy’s texts on space and his concept of a “spatial kaleidoscope” as applied to the experience of walking up the ramps. 





A 19, 1927
Oil and Graphite on Canvas
Dimensions: 80 x 95.5 cm
Hattula Moholy-Nagy, Ann Arbor, MI
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York




“ For a new ordering of a new world the need arose again to take possession of the simplest elements of expression, color, form, matter, space. ”
László Moholy-Nagy, “On the Problem of New Content  and New Form” (1922)

Born into a Jewish family in rural Hungary, Moholy-Nagy began to publish poetry and short stories at a young age.  In 1915, he left the University of Budapest, where he had enrolled as a law student, to serve as an artillery officer  in the Austro-Hungarian army. While enlisted, he made numerous drawings and sketches. After convalescing  from a hand wound he suffered on the Russian front, he continued to publish poems, stories, and reviews for the Hungarian literary journal Jelenkor (Present age). After his discharge from the army in 1918, he attended classes at  a free art school in Budapest, where he studied the works  of old masters, particularly Rembrandt, as well as those  of Paul Cézanne, Vincent van Gogh, and practitioners of Cubism and Futurism. He frequented the city’s lively café scene and came into close contact with Magyar Aktivizmus (Hungarian Activism), the influential avant-garde artistic  and antimilitary movement headed by the artist and writer  Lajos Kassák, who also founded the short-lived association MA (Today) and the eponymous magazine.

In autumn 1919, Moholy-Nagy moved to Vienna for a brief period before settling in Berlin in early spring 1920, where he became the correspondent for MA. There he met his future wife, Lucia Schulz, a socially and politically engaged photographer and editor. He also met Dada artists—whose works had already influenced his own—and encountered Constructivism, which had a formative impact on his developing style and aesthetics




A 19, 1927 (DETAIL )




PHOTOGRAM, 1924 (PRINTED 1929)
Gelatin Silver Print (Enlargement From a Photogram)
Dimensions: 95.5 x 68.5 cm - Frame: 126.2 x 98.7 x 4 cm
Galerie Berinson, Berlin
 



PHOTOGRAM, ( MOONFACE ) ( SELF-PORTRAIT IN PROFILE ), 1926, PRINTED 1935
Gelatin Silver Print (Enlargement From a Photogram)
Dimensions: 97 x 68 cm - Frame: 100 x 71.8 x 5.1 cm

Collection of Hattula Moholy-Nagy, Ann Arbor, Michigan




CH B3, 1941 (PART FROM PAINTING)






CH B3, 1941
Oil and Graphite on Canvas
Dimensions: 127 x 203 cm
Private Collection 




PHOTOGRAM, 1941
Gelatin Silver Photogram
Dimensions: 28 x 36 cm
The Art Institute of Chicago, gift of Sally Petrilli, 1985
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
 





ADVERTISEMENT FOR LONDON UNDERGROUND, 1936
Color Lithograph
Dimensions: 101.5 x 62.9 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Gift of Philip Johnson 1950




ADVERTISEMENT FOR LONDON UNDERGROUND, 1937
Color Lithograph
Dimensions: 101 x 63 cm
Victoria and Albert Museum, London 

The London Underground underwent remarkable growth in the early 1930s, with the new stations and platforms adhering to a distinctive architectural style. Moholy-Nagy designed visually compelling posters for the city’s sophisticated transportation system that laud it as an example of scientific progress and modern proficiency.




ADVERTISEMENT FOR LONDON UNDERGROUND, 1937
Color Lithograph
Dimensions: 101.3 x 63.2 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Gift of Philip Johnson 1950 




“ New creative experiments are an enduring necessity. ”
László Moholy-Nagy,  “Production-Reproduction” (1922)

Moholy-Nagy began to move away from representational imagery as  he became influenced by the Constructivists, who believed art should reinforce social reform through simple, minimal forms in order to reflect the modern industrial world. He began to paint abstract geometric canvases in which diagonals, curves, circles, half-moons, and bands of color form architectural structures in space. The shapes seem to overlap, creating the illusion of a kind of glass architecture, a nod to the value of transparency and light proclaimed by German writers and modern architects in the early part of the twentieth century.
A prolific writer, Moholy-Nagy began to collaborate with others on texts and manifestos, including “Manifesto of Elemental Art” (1921), written with Hans Arp, Raoul Hausmann, and Iwan Puni. He participated in his first exhibition at the avant-garde gallery Der Sturm in Berlin in February 1922 with the Hungarian artist László Péri. The presentation, which included abstract paintings as well as assemblages and reliefs made of industrial materials, was successful, earning him subsequent exhibitions and the publication of his woodcut designs in the gallery’s periodical. This recognition also spurred the publication of several important essays, including “Production-Reproduction” (1922), in which the artist formulated his theories for a new understanding of a person’s relationship to “creative activity” and documented novel recording methods with respect to the phonograph, photography, and film.  In “Dynamic-Constructive Systems of Forces” (1922), coauthored with Hungarian Alfred Kemény, he advocated “to replace the static principle of classical art with the dynamic principle of universal life.” 
Moholy-Nagy also began to experiment with photograms, cameraless photographs made by placing objects directly onto the surface of light sensitive paper. Enthused by the creative and reproductive possibilities of the photographic medium, he would also go on to make photographs with a camera as well as photomontages, composite images intended to create new forms and meanings.




PROSPECTUS FOR BAUHAUS BOOKS, 1-14, 1928
Letterpress
Dimensions: 14.8 x 21 cm
Getty Research Center, Los Angeles




SPACE MODULATOR, 1939 - 1945
Oil and Incised Lines on Plexiglas, in Original Frame
Dimensions: Plexiglas: 63.2 × 66.7 cm; Frame: 88.6 × 93 cm
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding 
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York




SPACE MODULATOR, 1939 - 1945 ( DETAIL )




PHOTOGRAM, CA. 1925-28, PRINTED 1929
Gelatin Silver Print (Enlargement From Photogram) From 
The Giedion-Mappe (Giedion Portfolio)
Dimensions: 40 x 30 cm - Frame: 45.4 x 37.8 x 3.2 cm
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Museum Purchase Funded by the 
Mary Kathryn Lynch Kurtz Charitable Lead Trust, The Manfred Heiting Collection 
A

In 1929, Moholy-Nagy enlarged several  of his photograms from different periods and published them in an edition for his Giedion Mappe, a portfolio of ten images. Art historian Siegfried Giedion was a close friend of Moholy-Nagy’s and passionate about modernist photography and its reproductive possibilities. Believing that the size of his photogram images could  be variable, Moholy-Nagy created socalled repro-negatives for some of his unique photograms and then printed  them very large for exhibition purposes, approximating a painting’s format; two other such examples are on view nearby.




SPACE MODULATOR CH FOR Y, 1942
Oil and Incised Lines on Formica
Dimensions: 154 x 60.5 cm
Collection of Hattula Moholy-Nagy, Ann Arbor, Michigan 
 



I KNOW NOTHING ABOUT IT, 1927
Photomontage (Gelatin Silver Print)
Dimensions: 22.5 x 17.1 cm - Frame: 50.5 x 37.8 x 3.5 cm
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles




CONSTRUCTIONS: KESTNER PORTFOLIO 6, 1923
Lithograph, Edition of 50
Dimensions: 60 x 44 cm - Frame: 73 x 57.8 x 3.5 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Acquired Through the Publisher, 1981




CIRCUS AND SIDESHOW POSTER [THE BENEVOLENT GENTLEMEN], 1924
Photomontage (Gelatin Silver Print)
Dimensions: 28.1 x 20.3 cm - Frame: 57.5 x 42.2 x 3.5 cm
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles




SPACE MODULATOR CH FOR R1, 1942
Oil and Incised Lines on Formica
Dimensions: 158 x 65 cm
Collection of Hattula Moholy-Nagy, Ann Arbor, Michigan 




PHOTOGRAM, CA. 1928-29
Gelatin Silver Print (Enlargement From a Photogram)
Dimensions: 38.7 x 29.9 cm - Frame: 51.8 x 41.8 x 2.8 cm
Galerie Berinson, Berlin 




CH BEATA I, 1939 ( DETAIL )




PHOTOGRAM, 1939
Gelatin Silver Photogram
50.2 x 40.1 cm - Frame: 71.1 x 55.9 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Anonymous Gift




Installation View: Moholy-Nagy: Future Present,
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, May 27 - September 7, 2016
Photo: David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
 



PHOTOGRAM, CA. 1939-40
Gelatin Silver Photogram
Dimensions: 50.1 x 40.2 cm - Frame: 73.3 x 58.1 cm
The Art Institute of Chicago, gift of George and Ruth Barford 
 



CH BEATA I, 1939
Oil and Graphite on Canvas
Dimensions:  118.9 × 119.8 cm
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding 
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
A
Many paintings that Moholy-Nagy made  in the United States are titled with the designation “CH,” which indicates Chicago. “Beata” may refer to a state of happiness or relief at having reached his adopted city and country. There, Moholy-Nagy developed a loose, organic, and gestural style in his work, while still retaining his distinctive vocabulary of overlapping shapes, transparencies, and dotted patterns that allude to the motifs in Light Prop for an Electric Stage (Lichtrequisit einer elektrischen Bühne, 1930; recreated 2006), emphasizing the relationships among the various mediums with which he was constantly experimenting.




PHOTOGRAM, 1943
Silver Photogram
50.4 x 40.5 cm - Frame: 64.9 x 80 x 4 cm
Musée National d’art moderne/Centre de Création Industrielle,
Centre Pompidou, Paris, Purchased 1994




PHOTOGRAM, 1943 ( DETAIL)






PHOTOGRAPH (BERLIN RADIO TOWER), CA. 1928 - 1929
Gelatin Silver Print
Dimensions: 36 x 25.5 cm - Frame: 58.1 x 47.9 cm
The Art Institute of Chicago, Julien Levy Collection,
Special Photography Acquisition Fund




“ Not against technical progress, but with it. ”
László Moholy-Nagy, The New Vision: From Material to Architecture (1930)

In 1923, Walter Gropius, the founder of the Bauhaus school of art and design, invited Moholy-Nagy to join the faculty. Until 1928, Moholy-Nagy taught the school’s preliminary course, with Josef Albers, and directed the metal workshop. Joining the ranks of established artists Vasily Kandinsky and Paul Klee, Moholy-Nagy’s appointment emphasized a change in the school’s direction, as stipulated by Gropius, who advocated for the connection between art and technology. In 1924, Moholy-Nagy’s third exhibition at Der Sturm in Berlin included his industrially made enamel paintings, which caused a sensation among his contemporaries.
Moholy-Nagy published, along with Gropius, the Bauhaus Books series, a total of fourteen volumes that gave voice to leading artists of the day. He collaborated with designer Herbert Bayer—who promoted a streamlined, “universal” alphabet—on eye-catching typography for Bauhaus stationery, programs, announcements, and various advertising materials, combining text and photography in an effort to convey a clear and direct message. He continued to paint variations on geometric and architectural compositions of intersecting planes and floating shapes and published lithographs, in which he sought a “genuine space system, a dictionary for space relationships.” He also made photomontages in a nod to the political and provocative imagery of Berlin Dada, collecting materials from magazines and newspapers and reassembling them in surprising combinations and narratives rich with humor, political satire, and often mysterious meanings.




COVER FOR PHOTO-QUALITY, SPECIAL 
ISSUE OF QUALITY 9, NOS. 1-2, 1931
Letterpress
Dimensions: 29.7 x 21 cm
Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles




COVER AND DESIGN FOR WILL GROHMANN (THE COLLECTION OF IDA BIENERT),
(POTSDAM: MULLER & L. KIEPENHEUER), 1933
Bound Volume
Dimensions: 25.7 x 19.5 cm
Collection of Michael Szarvasy, New York




LOVE THY NEIGHBOR / MURDER ON THE TRACKS (FILM POSTER), 1925
Photomontage (Gelatin Silver Print)
Dimensions: 37.5 x 27 cm - Frame: 72.7 x 57.5 x 3.5 cm
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles




WORK OF THE BUILDING GUILDS, 
(BERLIN: VORWARTS BUCHDRUCKEREI) 1928
Letterpress
Dimensions: 29.8 x 21 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Jan Tschichold Collection,
Gift of Philip Johnson, 1999




LEDA AND THE SWAN, 1925
Photomontage (Photomechanical Reproductions, Ink, and Graphite) on Paper
Dimensions: 65 x 47 cm - Frame: 88.9 x 68.6 cm
George Eastman Museum, Rochester, New York,
Purchase with Funds From Eastman Kodak Company








INVITATION CARD FOR L. MOHOLY-NAGY: PAINTINGS, DRAWINGS, CONSTRUCTIONS, LONDON, DECEMBER 31, 1936 - JANUARY 27, 1937
Letterpress
Dimensions: 12.7 x 20.3 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Jan Tschichold Collection,
Gift of Philip Johnson, 1999 




COVER & DESIGN FOR VISION IN MOTION ( PAUL THEOBALD, 1947 )
Bound Volume
Dimensions: 28.6 × 22.9 cm
The Hilla von Rebay Foundation Archive
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York










SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM NEW YORK




SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM NEW YORK
FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT • ESTABLISHED IN 1939 • BUILT IN 1959
An internationally renowned art museum and one of the most significant architectural icons of the 20th century, the Guggenheim Museum in New York is at once a vital cultural center, an educational institution, and the heart of an international network of museums. Visitors can experience special exhibitions of modern and contemporary art, lectures by artists and critics, performances and film screenings, classes for teens and adults, and daily tours of the galleries led by museum educators. Founded on a collection of early modern masterpieces, the Guggenheim Museum today is an ever-evolving institution devoted to the art of the 20th century and beyond.
ARCHITECTURE
In 1943, Frank Lloyd Wright was commissioned to design a building to house the Museum of Non-Objective Painting, which had been established by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation in 1939. In a letter dated June 1, 1943, Hilla Rebay, the curator of the foundation and director of the museum, instructed Wright, “I want a temple of spirit, a monument!”
Wright’s inverted-ziggurat design was not built until 1959. Numerous factors contributed to this 16-year delay: modifications to the design (all told, the architect produced 6 separate sets of plans and 749 drawings), the acquisition of additional property, and the rising costs of building materials following World War II. The death of the museum’s benefactor, Solomon R. Guggenheim, in 1949 further delayed the project. It was not until 1956 that construction of the museum, renamed in Guggenheim’s memory, finally began.
Wright’s masterpiece opened to the public on October 21, 1959, six months after his death, and was immediately recognized as an architectural icon. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum is arguably the most important building of Wright’s late career. A monument to modernism, the unique architecture of the space, with its spiral ramp riding to a domed skylight, continues to thrill visitors and provide a unique forum for the presentation of contemporary art. In the words of critic Paul Goldberger, “Wright’s building made it socially and culturally acceptable for an architect to design a highly expressive, intensely personal museum. In this sense almost every museum of our time is a child of the Guggenheim.”
Wright’s original plans for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum called for a ten-story tower behind the smaller rotunda, to house galleries, offices, workrooms, storage, and private studio apartments. Largely for financial reasons, Wright’s proposed tower went unrealized. In 1990, Gwathmey Siegel & Associates Architects revived the plan with its eight-story tower, which incorporates the foundation and framing of a smaller 1968 annex designed by Frank Lloyd Wright’s son-in-law, William Wesley Peters.
In 1992, after a major interior renovation, the museum reopened with the entire original Wright building now devoted to exhibition space and completely open to the public for the first time. The tower contains 4,750 square meters of new and renovated gallery space, 130 square meters of new office space, a restored restaurant, and retrofitted support and storage spaces. The tower’s simple facade and grid pattern highlight Wright’s unique spiral design and serves as a backdrop to the rising urban landscape behind the museum.
In 2008, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum was designated a National Historic Landmark; in 2015, along with nine other buildings designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, the building was nominated by the United States to be included in the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage List.

https://www.guggenheim.org/about-us










ARCHITECT FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT










SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM RESTAURANT








ARCHITECT FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT




SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM NEW YORK












NUCLEAR II, 1946
Oil and Graphite on Canvas
Dimensions: 126.4 x 126.4 cm - Frame: 130.2 x 130.2 x 5.7 cm
Milwaukee Art Museum, Gift of Kenneth Parker 




PHOTOGRAM, 1926
Gelatin Silver Photogram
Dimensions: 23.8 x 17.8 cm
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Ralph M. Parsons Fund
A

At the beginning of the twentieth century, tactile sensorial activities received a great deal of attention across Europe. The sense of touch––and its derived perceptions–– was often utilized in education methods and art practices. In his photograms, Moholy-Nagy would occasionally use  his extremities as fortuitous elements interfering with the objects arranged  on the photosensitive sheets. In other works on view on this level, his palm and fingers are distinctly outlined, sometimes revealing the details of his skin texture  as a result of the pressure exerted against the paper. The “hands photograms”  seem to be a tribute to the paramount importance of the body and its role in creating art.




CONSTRUCTION IN ENAMEL 1, 1923 
Porcelain Enamel on Steel
Dimensions: 94 x 60 cm - Frame: 116.9 x 81.1 x 8.2 cm
Collection of Victor and Marianne Langen 




SRHO 1, 1936
Oil and Incised Lines on Rhodoid, on Original Painted Panel
Dimensions: Rhodoid: 78.9 x 64.1 cm - Panel: 91.4 x 86.4 cm
Private Collection 




THE EDIFICE OF THE WORLD, 1927
Photomontage (Photomechanical Reproductions, Ink, and Graphite) on Paper
Dimensions: 64.9 x 49.2 cm - Frame: 88.9 x 68.6 cm
George Eastman Museum, Rochester, New York,
Purchase with Funds From Eastman Kodak Company 




YELLOW CIRCLE & BLACK SQUARE, 1921  
Oil and Graphite on Canvas
Dimensions: 135 x 114.3 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 

The Riklis Collection of McCrory Corporation




HOW DO I STAY YOUNG AND BEAUTIFUL?, 1925
Photomontage (Gelatin Silver Print)
Dimensions: 17.4 x 12.5 cm - Frame: 37.8 x 33.3 x 2.7 cm
Collection of Hattula Moholy-Nagy, Ann Arbor, Michigan
 



Q XX, 1923
Oil on Panel
Dimensions: 79 x 69 cm - Frame: 81.5 x 72 x 6 cm
Von der Heydt-Museum, Wuppertal, Germany 
 



Y, CA. 1920–21
Gouache and Collage on Paper
Dimensions: 27.5 x 21.5 cm - Frame: 57.2 x 50.5 cm
Private Collection




“ As in painting so in photography we have to learn to see, not the ‘picture,’ not the narrow rendering of nature, but an ideal instrument of visual expression. ”
László Moholy-Nagy, Vision in Motion (1947)

Moholy-Nagy believed his abstract paintings should not refer to anything in the real world, but he thought photography and film could include representational subject matter, and thus advocated for the necessity of working in various mediums. Throughout the 1920s, photography took on an increasingly important role for the artist as he embraced the idea of a “new vision,” a means of expressive power through photographs taken from unconventional perspectives and exaggerated viewpoints that could foster a new understanding of art in a fast-changing culture. Moholy-Nagy’s wide range of subject matter includes striking architectural viewpoints and arresting studies in texture, shadow, and light. These reveal formal compositional and organizational principles as the artist sought “new experiences of space” in his photographic work, just as he sought similar qualities in his paintings. In the latter, MoholyNagy experimented with various industrial materials, including the plastics Trolit and Galalith, but from around 1928, he did much less painting for several years, temporarily considering the medium to be too restrictive, and instead focused on photography, design, and film.
In 1929–31, Moholy-Nagy participated in the exhibition Film und Foto (Fifo) as both a curator and exhibited photographer. This landmark presentation, which traveled across Europe and to Japan, emphasized the relationship of photography and film to society. Fifo was emblematic of Moholy-Nagy’s “new vision,” whereby unusual methods and techniques were hailed as the new means of creating art in an increasingly technological world. In 1930, he created his abstract film Light Play: Black-White-Gray (Ein Lichtspiel schwarz-weiß-grau), which showcased his Light Prop for an Electric Stage (Lichtrequisit einer elektrischen Bühne, 1930, recreated 2006) as its subject, illustrating his efforts to move from static painting to kinetic light displays in his desire to link different mediums.




Z VII, 1926
Oil and Graphite on Canvas
Dimensions: 95.3 x 76.2 cm
National Gallery of Art, Washington, Gift of Richard S. Zeisler




SPACE MODULATOR L3, 1936
Oil on Perforated Zinc and Composition Board, with Glass-Headed Pins
Dimensions: 43.8 x 48.6 cm - Frame: 46.4 x 51.4 x 6.4 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Purchase 1947
A

In Space Modulator L3, Moholy-Nagy intensified the work’s spatial ambiguity by combining tiny perforations in the zinc sheet with projecting glass-headed pins. Both elements generate shifting shadows that intermingle with the zinc and the painted forms above and below, fusing light effects with physical mediums




PAPMAC, 1943
Oil and Incised Lines on Plexiglas, in Original Frame
Dimensions: Plexiglas: 58.4 × 70.5 cm; Frame: 91.1 × 101.9 cm
Private collection
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

A
Moholy-Nagy achieved extraordinary effects in at least three works on sheets of flawed Plexiglas, all on display on this level. During the manufacturing process, overheating  of the plastic can form bubbles, distortions,  and other imperfections on its surface.  The flawed materials may have been  factory discards that were embraced by Moholy-Nagy due to the difficulty of obtaining materials like Plexiglas, which  were needed for the war effort. He favored the defective materials and accentuated  their ability to cast shadows, exploiting the distortions and generating vibrating effects. The evocative, playful title Papmac derives  from the outmoded Hungarian diminutive papmackska, a colorful tiger moth or caterpillar whose shape is evoked by the defects in the plastic. In drawing attention  to the medium’s flaws, the title underscores their centrality to the work.




Installation View: Moholy-Nagy: Future Present,
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, May 27 - September 7, 2016
Photo: David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation




PAPMAC, 1943 ( PAPMAC )




PHOTOGRAM, CA. 1925-28, PRINTED 1929
Gelatin Silver Print (Enlargement From Photogram) From 
The Giedion-Mappe (Giedion Portfolio)
Dimensions: 40 x 30 cm - Frame: 45.4 x 37.8 x 3.2 cm
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Museum Purchase Funded by the 
Mary Kathryn Lynch Kurtz Charitable Lead Trust, The Manfred Heiting Collection 




LEUK 4, 1945
Oil and Graphite on Canvas
Dimensions: 124.7 x 124.7 cm
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York 
Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding Collection 




PHOTOGRAM, CA. 1925-28, PRINTED 1929
Gelatin Silver Print (Enlargement From Photogram) From 
The Giedion-Mappe (Giedion Portfolio)
Dimensions: 40 x 30 cm - Frame: 45.4 x 37.8 x 3.2 cm
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Museum Purchase Funded by the 
Mary Kathryn Lynch Kurtz Charitable Lead Trust, The Manfred Heiting Collection 
 





PHOTOGRAPH (BOATS), 1927
Gelatin Silver Print
Dimensions: 29.5 x 21.6 cm - Frame: 58.1 x 47.9 cm
The Art Institute of Chicago, Julien Levy Collection,
Special Photography Acquisition Fund




NUCLEAR I, CH, 1945
Oil and Graphite on Canvas
Dimensions: 96.5 x 76.2 cm - Frame: 116.8 x 96.5 x 7.6 cm
The Art Institute of Chicago, gift of Mary and Leigh Block 




PHOTOGRAPH (FROM THE RADIO TOWER, BERLIN), CA. 1928–29
Gelatin Silver Print
Dimensions: 34.7 x 26 cm - Frame: 52.1 x 44.5 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Anonymous Gift




B-10 SPACE MODULATOR, 1942
Oil and Incised Lines on Plexiglas, in Original Frame
Dimensions: Plexiglas: 42.9 × 29.2 cm; frame: 82.9 × 67.6 cm
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding 
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
A

Moholy-Nagy used the new material of Plexiglas—first introduced in the United States in sheets in 1934—for his hybrids of painting and sculpture that he called Space Modulators, of which there are several examples in this exhibition. The reflective and transparent qualities of the material served his purpose to modulate and activate light—his favorite medium—in order to create motion and movement, often in unexpected ways. At times, he would manipulate the Plexiglas, as with this work and others nearby, by heating the plastic sheets (sometimes in his kitchen oven), and then shaping them by hand to enhance  their capacity to distort light and imply undulating movement.




“ An education for personal growth. ”
László Moholy-Nagy, Vision in Motion (1947)

In Berlin, where he had resettled in 1928 after having left the Bauhaus, Moholy-Nagy turned to more commercial artistic pursuits, including advertising design and typography, exhibition design for housing developments, and stage design for the opera and theater, for which  he created light projections. In winter 1931, he met writer Sibyl Pietzsch, who became his second wife and with whom he had two daughters.  In 1934, because of the Nazis’ rise to power, Moholy-Nagy left Berlin and found exhibition and advertising work in Amsterdam. He collaborated there with De Stijl artists and architects, experimented with color photography, designed for the magazine International Textiles, had  a solo exhibition at the Stedelijk Museum, and lectured frequently.
In spring 1935, Moholy-Nagy moved with his family to London, where  he worked mainly as a graphic designer, creating posters for the London Underground and advertising materials for Imperial Airways and Isokon furniture. He continued to create short, documentary-like films, explore the possibilities of color photography, and experiment with industrial materials, including aluminum and a range of plastics, as he pursued his research with light and transparency. In July 1937, he sailed to the United States at the invitation of the Association of Arts and Industries, which had been encouraged by former Bauhaus director Walter Gropius to recruit him as the director of the New Bauhaus in Chicago. The school was forced to close, for financial reasons, after only one year. In February 1939, with the monetary and moral support of Walter Paepcke, art collector and founder of the packaging company Container Corporation of America, Moholy-Nagy reopened the school as the School of Design (subsequently renamed the Institute of Design), which today is part  of the Illinois Institute of Technology. Alongside his work as an administrator and fund-raiser, Moholy-Nagy continued to pursue his artistic practices, including photograms, color photography, and the exploration of new materials, such as Formica. Moholy-Nagy was especially intrigued by Plexiglas, whose unique transparent properties would occupy him until the end of his life.




B-10 SPACE MODULATOR, 1942 (DETAIL)




PHOTOGRAM, 1943
Gelatin Silver Photogram
Dimensions: 25.5 x 20.4 cm - Frame: 66.2 x 51.2 x 2.5 cm
Bauhaus-Archiv Berlin 




A II (CONSTRUCTION A II), 1924
Oil and Graphite on Canvas
Dimensions: 115.8 × 136.5 cm
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding 
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
A

Moholy-Nagy painted A II (Construction A II) soon after joining the faculty of the Bauhaus school of art and design in Weimar, Germany. As if constructed around a mathematical formula, the canvas is composed of two similar bodies of seemingly intersecting planes and circles with a smaller structure hovering below a larger one, both crossing through a white plane. Varying in degrees  of perceived transparency and color intensity, these shapes appear to overlap, forming an architectural construction in space.




Installation View: Moholy-Nagy: Future Present,
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, May 27 - September 7, 2016
Photo: David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation




LOOK BEFORE YOU LEAP/SPORT MAKES YOU HUNGRY, 1927
Photomontage (Gelatin Silver Print)
Dimensions: 12.2 x 17.5 cm - Frame: 37.8 x 50.5 x 3.5 cm
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles




DER STURM, VOLUME 14, NO 1, JANUARY 1923
Linocut Closed:
Dimensions: 20 x 14.4 cm
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Library, New York
A

The German art and literary magazine  Der Sturm was the brainchild of the multifaceted art critic and composer  Herwarth Walden, who not only established the influential Berlin gallery of the same  name and this periodical showcasing Expressionism, Cubism, Dada, Surrealism, and other modern art movements, but also published artist portfolios and organized a forum for lectures and experimental theater. Moholy-Nagy exhibited several times at  Der Sturm and published texts and woodcuts for the periodical.




PHOTOGRAPH (ELLEN FRANK), 1929
Gelatin Silver Print
Dimensions: 37 x 27.7 cm - Frame: 68.6 x 58.4 cm
George Eastman Museum, Rochester, New York,
Purchase with Funds From Eastman Kodak Company
 



DER STURM, VOL. 13, NO. 9, SEPTEMBER 1922
Linocut
Dimensions: Closed: 17.3 x 16.5 cm
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Library, New York
 



TYPOGRAPHIC COLLAGE, 1922
Collage on Paper
Dimensions: 27.2 x 38.1 cm - Frame: 39.7 x 59.7 x 2.7 cm
Collection of Hattula Moholy-Nagy, Ann Arbor, Michigan
A

Typographic Collage makes reference to Moholy-Nagy’s early Dada works that incorporate letters and numbers. Here, however, he subverts legibility, placing letters upside down and backward in a mysterious equation that––with its crisply outlined sans-serif letters––appears as if it were readily comprehensible. This collage also anticipates the distinctive book and letterhead designs Moholy-Nagy would create at the Bauhaus, at times in collaboration with director Walter Gropius and designer Herbert Bayer.




PHOTOGRAPH (SAILLING [HILDE HORN]), 1928
Gelatin Silver Print
Dimensions: 37.4 x 27.2 cm - Frame: 68.6 x 53.3 cm
George Eastman Museum, Rochester, New York,
Purchase With Funds From Eastman Kodak Company




ADVERTISEMENT FOR ISOKON, CA. 1935 - 1936
Letterpress
Dimensions: 17.1 x 25.1 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Jan Tschichold Collection,
Gift of Philip Johnson, 1999 




OUR SIZES / OUR BIG MEN, 1924
Photomontage (Gelatin Silver Print)
Dimensions: 14 x 19.6 cm - Frame: 37.8 x 50.5 x 3.5 cm
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
 



Installation View: Moholy-Nagy: Future Present,
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, May 27 - September 7, 2016
Photo: David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation




RADIO AND RAILWAY LANDSCAPE, 1919 - 1920
Oil on Burlap
73 x 50 cm - Frame: 77 x 52 cm
Private Collection




THE SHATTERED MARRIAGE, 1925
Photomontage (Gelatin Silver Print)
Dimensions: 16.5 x 12.1 cm - Frame: 50.5 x 37.8 x 3.5 cm
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles




Z VIII, 1924
Distemper and Graphite on Canvas
Dimensions: 114 x 132 cm
Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Nationalgalerie 





Desk Set with Parker 51 pen, 1939/46 Desk Set: Satin-Finished, Chrome-Plated 
Brass, Magnetic Ball Holder, Designed by László Moholy-Nagy, 1946; Parker 51 pen: 
Lucite Body with Gold Point and Small Components, Designed 
by Kenneth Parker and Marlin Baker, and Patented in 1939
23.6 x 15.4 x 4.3 cm
Collection of Susan M. Wirth, Milwaukee, LLC




A.XX, 1924
Oil and Graphite on Canvas
Dimensions: 135.5 x 115 cm - Frame: 143.5 x 123 x 8 cm
Musée National D’art Moderne/Centre de Création Industrielle, Centre Pompidou, 
Paris, Gift of the Société des Amis du Musée National D’art Moderne in 1962 




CONSTRUCTION, 1922
Oil and Graphite on Panel
Dimensions: 54.3 x 45.6 cm - Frame: 70.8 x 62.2 x 10.8 cm
Harvard Art Museums/Busch-Reisinger Museum, Gift of Lydia 
Dorner in Memory of Dr. Alexander Dorner 
 



Installation View: Moholy-Nagy: Future Present,
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, May 27 - September 7, 2016
Photo: David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation




“ If the unity of art can be established with all the subject matters taught and exercised, then a real reconstruction of this world could be hoped for—more balanced and less dangerous. ”
László Moholy-Nagy, “The Contribution of the Arts to  Social Reconstruction” (1943)

In his final years, Moholy-Nagy continued to create art in various mediums and to exhibit widely while he simultaneously pursued design work and shouldered the manifold duties demanded of him to run his design school, which he called a “laboratory for a new education.”  He made some of his most original work during this time, remaining faithful to his longtime fascination with the mysteries of light, shadow, and transparency. He also explored the scientific advances of the  day, experimenting with 35 mm Kodachrome color film—still in its infancy—and with plastics, as well as continuing his work  with photograms.
He produced an array of explicitly autobiographical or narrative canvases—his Leuk and Nuclear paintings—that allude to the cancer  that would eventually take his life in 1946 and to the horrors of the atomic bombings in Japan in 1945. Especially prominent in his late work are Plexiglas hybrids of painting and sculpture, which he titled Space Modulators, objects to be perceived as “vehicles for choreographed luminosity” that cast special shadow effects. 
Moholy-Nagy was always in pursuit of the “whole man,” seeking out new materials and methods in the steadfast belief that what mattered most were intellectual awareness and the necessity for the assimilation of  art, technology, and education. From Europe, he brought his reputation and intellectual authority as well as his faith in humanity. Having arrived in America at a critical time between two world wars and on the cusp  of significant artistic developments, he remained true to his vision as  he paved the way for an increasingly interdisciplinary and multimedia age. The body of work on view in this exhibition exemplifies Moholy - Nagy’s commitment to the Gesamtwerk, or the total work, which he sought throughout his life, advocating for “the specific need of our time for a vision in motion.” These last three words became the title of his influential culminating text, which was published posthumously in 1947.




ROOM OF THE PRESENT
Constructed in 2009 From Plans and Other Documentation Dated 1930. Mixed Media, Dimensions: 442 x 586.8 x 842.8 cm
Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven.
Foreground: Light Prop For an Electric Stage, 1930. Exhibition Replica, Constructed in 2006, Through the Courtesy of Hattula Moholy-Nagy, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Metal, Plastics, Glass, Paint, and Wood, With Electric Motor,
Dimensions: 151 x 70 x 70 cm.
Harvard Art Museums/Busch-Reisinger Museum, Hildegard von Gontard Bequest Fund
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
Installation view: Moholy-Nagy: Future Present, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
Photo: David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation






NICKEL SCULPTURE WITH SPIRAL, 1921
Nickel - Plated Iron, Welded
Dimensions: 35.9 x 17.5 x 23.8 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Gift of Mrs. Sibyl Moholy-Nagy 1956
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Installation view: Moholy-Nagy: Future Present, Solomon R. Guggenheim
Photo: David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
A

Moholy-Nagy believed new materials called for a new kind of art. The metal construction of Nickel Sculpture with Spiral, which was included in the artist’s first exhibition at the Berlin gallery Der Sturm in 1922, gave it a specifically modern nature that appealed  to artists and critics for its connection to industry. A nod to Constructivism, the work exemplifies Moholy-Nagy’s dedication to industrial materials, and its outwardly spiraling form embodies dynamic energy  and motion.




PHOTOGRAPHS

Moholy-Nagy photographed several iconic modern structures, including the Eiffel  Tower in Paris, the intricate steel transporter bridge in Marseille, and the Berlin Radio Tower. Shot variously from exaggerated angles, dramatic viewpoints, and plunging perspectives, the images of the radio  tower and bridge are emblematic of the artist’s “new vision,” a way of looking at photography as an independent means  of artistic expression, offering multiple sensorial and aesthetic possibilities, as  an embodiment of modernity. These photographs also appear to be exercises  in abstraction and line drawing, as well  as explorations of the interplay between  light and shadow.




PHOTOGRAPH ( LIGHT PROP ), 1930
Gelatin Silver Print
Dimensions: 24 x 18.1 cm - Frame: 50.5 x 37.8 x 3.5 cm
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles 
 



ROOM OF THE PRESENT
Constructed in 2009 From Plans & Other Documentation Dated 1930. Mixed Media
Dimensions:  442 x 586.8 x 842.8 cm.
Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Installation View: Moholy-Nagy: Future Present, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
Photo: David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
A
ROOM OF THE PRESENT
Based on the few existing plans, drawings, and related correspondence Moholy-Nagy left behind, Room of the Present—unrealized in the artist’s lifetime—was constructed in 2009 by designers Kai-Uwe Hemken and Jakob Gebert for presentation in several European museums.
Room of the Present exemplifies Moholy-Nagy’s desire to achieve the Gesamtwerk, or the total work, unifying art, technology, science, and  film with life itself. Alexander Dorner, the ambitious young director of  the Provincial Museum in Hannover, Germany, was inspired by MoholyNagy’s contribution to the annual salon of the Société des artistes décorateurs (Society of Decorative Artists) in Paris in 1930. For the German section of the salon, Moholy-Nagy designed Room 2 (Salle 2), which served as the model for Room of the Present, along with other exhibition designs. Dorner was keen on devising a new concept for the modern museum by rearranging art collections into “atmosphere rooms” in an effort to break from traditional installation practices and challenge the viewer with an appreciation for contemporary art. Intrigued by Moholy-Nagy’s use of photography, film, and light effects, Dorner  invited him to design a comparable room for his museum.
Room of the Present would have included the most recent cultural developments in photography reproductions, films, slides, documents, and replicas of architecture, theater, and industrial design. Only one original object would have been included, Moholy-Nagy’s motor-driven light display apparatus Light Prop for an Electric Stage (Lichtrequisit einer elektrischen Bühne, 1930; recreated 2006), as the vehicle for the projection of fluctuating luminous effects. Also on view would have been films by Viking Eggeling, Sergei Eisenstein, and Dziga Vertov.

Though Room of the Present was never realized due to logistical and financial difficulties and the increasingly unstable political climate in Germany, it represented, in concept, Dorner and Moholy-Nagy’s thinking about the power of images and of the broad dissemination of knowledge and information. Intended as a hybrid between a museum gallery and a work of art, it would have served as what Moholy-Nagy described as an “arena of mass communication that would transform modern life.” Here, Room of the Present includes photographic panorama boards and loops, slide and film projection screens, movable panels with examples of typography, design objects, an educational text, and a replica of Light Prop for an Electric Stage placed inside a box in the center of the gallery, as originally envisaged by the artist.




TILLED FIELDS PAINTING, CA. 1920–21
Oil on Canvas
Dimensions: 64.5 x 75.5 cm - Frame: 71.5 x 81.2 x 6 cm
Albertina, Vienna, on Permanent Loan From the Forberg Collection




G5: 1923–26, 1926
Oil and Graphite on Galalith
Dimensions: 42 x 52.7 cm - Frame:.2 x 66 x 6.7 cm
Yale University Art Gallery, Gift of Collection Société Anonyme




PHOTOGRAM, 1922
Gelatin Silver Photogram on Printing - Out Paper
Dimensions: 13.7 x 8.7 cm
Private Collection
A

While Moholy-Nagy explored form, light, and transparency in his “glass architecture” paintings that reflected his interest in modern German architecture, he began to create photographic images without a camera, producing what he called “photograms.”  On view here are some of his earliest photograms, created by superimposing materials in a variety of shapes, textures, and translucencies on photographic paper  and then exposing the paper to light. As he described it, the technique allowed him to “sketch with light in the same way the painter works in a sovereign manner on the canvas with his own instruments of paintbrush or pigment,” creating weightless images rich in their interplay of light, shadow, and tonal variety. Moholy-Nagy considered light to be “a new plastic medium just as color in  painting and tone in music.”




CIRCLE SEGMENTS, 1921
Tempera on Canvas
Dimensions: 78 x 60 cm
Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid
 A

The influence of Constructivism’s emphasis  on simple geometric shapes is evident in the paintings seen here; all three illustrate how Moholy-Nagy achieves an equilibrium of forms and colors and creates innovative spatial relationships. Around this time, his paintings also began to assume enigmatically short and impersonal titles composed of combinations of letters and numbers. Circle Segments  was once owned by the German art collector and patron Ida Bienert, whose collection  also included works by Marc Chagall, Vasily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Kazimir Malevich, and Piet Mondrian. A copy of the catalogue of her private collection, designed by Moholy-Nagy, is on view on Rotunda Level 4.




K VII, 1922
Oil and Graphite on Canvas
Dimensions: 115.3 x 135.9 cm - Frame: 130.8 x 151.2 x 8 cm

Tate: Purchased 1961




PHOTOGRAM, 1922 (DETAIL)






COVER AND DESIGN FOR LASZLO MOHOLY-NAGY, 
OSKAR SCHLEMMER, AND FARKAS MOLNAR
(The Theater of the Bauhaus), Bauhaus Books , 4 (Munich: Albert Langen Verlag), 1925
Bound Volume
Dimensions: 23 x 18 cm
Collection of Richard S. Frary
A
Distinguished by their font and imagery, the fourteen books published by the Bauhaus were written, for the most part, by the school’s staff and aimed to bring architecture, pedagogy, theater, design, photography, and art to a broad and international public. In The Theater of the Bauhaus, produced with Oskar Schlemmer and Farkas Molnár, Moholy-Nagy proposed ideas for a new form of total theater in which light plays a central role and “must undergo even greater transformation in this respect than sound.” Particularly influential, Painting Photography Film identifies the new role of photography and its relationship to painting that was considered to be outmoded, conveying how technological developments created new forms of creativity and advocating for artists to work with the current means available. Published after MoholyNagy left the Bauhaus, and the last in the series, From Material to Architecture spells out his pedagogical program for painting, sculpture, and architecture, and discusses how light can be used as a formal medium.






CH 7, 1941 CHICAGO SPACE 7, 1941
Oil and Graphite on Canvas
Dimensions: 120 x 120 cm
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York
Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding Collection 






CONSTRUCTION AL6, 1933–34
Oil and Incised Lines on Aluminum
Dimensions: 60 × 50 cm
IVAM, Institut Valencià d’Art Modern, Generalitat
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
A

Moholy-Nagy wrote that when unfiltered  light penetrates through perforations—in conjunction with painted effects—“a kind of spatial kinetics also begins to play its part,” because the work appears to move as the viewer walks past. The layering of painted shapes that mimic the contours of the shifting shadows of the holes creates a dynamic visual experience that blurs the distinction between material and immaterial; “light and pigment . . . [become] fused into a new unity.”




DUAL FORM WITH CHROMIUM RODS, 1946
Plexiglas and Chrome - Plated Brass
Dimensions: 92.7 × 121.6 × 55.9 cm
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst,
Bonn/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Installation View: Moholy-Nagy: Future Present, Solomon R. Guggenheim
Photo: David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation




PHOTOGRAPH (STUDIO WING OF THE BAUHAUS BUILDING/ 
BAUHAUS BALCONIES) 1927
Gelatin Silver Print
Dimensions: 24.6 x 17.9 cm - Frame: 51.8 x 41.8 x 2.8 cm
Galerie Berinson, Berlin

Photograph (Studio Wing of the Bauhaus Building/Bauhaus Balconies) is a negative print from a series of iconic images of  the balconies of the Bauhaus school  in Dessau, where Moholy-Nagy taught from 1925 to 1928. The black-and-white contrast––inherent to the effect of the negative print––and the drastic bottom-up perspective enhance the Constructivist composition. The architectural elements as well as the human figure silhouetted  on the top of the balconies create intersecting diagonals, recalling the  artist’s abstract paintings.




COVER & DESIGN FOR VISION IN MOTION ( PAUL THEOBALD, 1947 )
Bound Volume
Dimensions: 28.6 × 22.9 cm
The Hilla von Rebay Foundation Archive
© 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York




PHOTOGRAPH (STUDIO WING OF THE BAUHAUS BUILDING/ 
BAUHAUS BALCONIES) 1927 (DETAIL)




CURATOR KAROLE P. B. VAIL 


























LASZLO MOHOLY - NAGY
László Moholy-Nagy (b. 1895, Borsód, Austria-Hungary; d. 1946, Chicago) believed in the potential of art as a vehicle for social transformation, working hand in hand with technology for the betterment of humanity. A restless innovator, Moholy-Nagy experimented with a wide variety of mediums, moving fluidly between the fine and applied arts in pursuit of his quest to illuminate the interrelatedness of life, art, and technology. An artist, educator, and writer who defied categorization, he expressed his theories in numerous influential writings that continue to inspire artists and designers today. Walter Gropius invited him to join the faculty at the Bauhaus school of art and design, where Moholy-Nagy taught in Weimar and Dessau in the 1920s. In 1937, he was appointed to head the New Bauhaus in Chicago; he later opened his own School of Design there (subsequently renamed the Institute of Design), which today is part of the Illinois Institute of Technology.
Among Moholy-Nagy’s radical innovations were his experiments with cameraless photographs (which he dubbed “photograms”); his unconventional use of industrial materials in painting and sculpture; experiments with light, transparency, space, and motion across mediums; and his work at the forefront of abstraction, as he strove to reshape the role of the artist in the modern  world. Moholy-Nagy: Future Present features paintings, sculptures, collages, drawings, prints, films, photograms, photographs, photomontages, projections, documentation, and examples of graphic, advertising, and stage design drawn from public and private collections across Europe and the United States.
On display in the museum’s High Gallery is Room of the Present (Raum der Gegenwart), a contemporary fabrication of an exhibition space conceived of by Moholy-Nagy in 1930, but not realized in his lifetime. On view for the  first time in the United States, the large-scale work contains photographic reproductions and design replicas as well as his kinetic Light Prop for an  Electric Stage (Lichtrequisit einer elektrischen Bühne, 1930; recreated 2006). Room of the Present illustrates Moholy-Nagy’s belief in the power of images  and the significance of the various means with which to view and disseminate them—a highly relevant paradigm in today’s constantly shifting and evolving technological world.
Moholy-Nagy is a central figure in the history of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. In 1929, Solomon R. Guggenheim and his advisor, German-born  artist Hilla Rebay, began collecting his paintings, works on paper, and sculpture  in depth for the Guggenheim’s growing collection of nonobjective art. His work held a special place at the Museum of Non-Objective Painting—the forerunner  of the Guggenheim Museum—where a memorial exhibition was presented shortly after his untimely death in 1946.