News
As modern life demanded new ways of living at the beginning of the 20th century, the Bauhaus responded with radical designs.
Compared to Moholy-Nagy's own vision, the Guggenheim show feels genteel. László Moholy-Nagy A II (Construction A II) (1924). Courtesy © 2016 Hattula Moholy-Nagy/VG ...
THE DAILY PIC (#1600): There’s tons of great work in the retrospective of Laszlo Moholy ... Museum of Modern Art, New York, Gift of Philip Johnson in memory of Sibyl Moholy-Nagy, 1971 ...
A retrospective of Moholy-Nagy’s work, the first in the United States in nearly half a century, opened Feb. 12 at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA). “Moholy-Nagy: Future Present” was ...
In photographs, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy is almost always smiling: a “magnificent, infectious grin”, as a contemporary described it, that announces the great Bauhaus artist and designer as the ...
Moholy-Nagy was not an engineer, nor was he a scientist. He was a Hungarian artist attracted to silberit for its extreme reflectiveness. Using the metal as a background for abstract paintings ...
I, like most art world types, have a passing familiarity with the art of László Moholy-Nagy. Though, like most art world types, that familiarity was a bit fuzzy, until Wednesday night.
László Moholy-Nagy discovered his leukemia in 1945. That same year he dedicated two works, Nuclear I, CH and Nuclear II, to atom fission. These paintings, among others uniquely reunited for Future ...
As modern life demanded new ways of living at the beginning of the 20th century, the Bauhaus responded with radical designs.
Siegel, Elizabeth and David Travis, eds. Taken by Design: Photographs from the Institute of Design, 1937–1971. Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago, pl. 20, p. 46 ...
László Moholy-Nagy, Eton. Pupils watching cricket from the pavilion on Agar’s Plough, c. 1930, part of an exhibition at the Gemeentemuseum, The Hague. Credit: Centre Pompidou. Musée d'art ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results