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Opinion Did Laszlo Moholy-Nagy Phone-In His Best Art? THE DAILY PIC: The Guggenheim shows abstractions that Moholy-Nagy claimed he ordered by telephone.
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 ...
Ben Davis tackles László Moholy-Nagy's latest show at the Guggenheim Museum in New York, which doesn't stack up to the artist's own vision.
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. It’s ...
Moholy-Nagy’s Light Prop for an Electric Stage (1929-30) is captivating to watch. It was completely innovative at the time, but according to chief curator Eik Kahng, it also represents one of the ...
McMaster Museum of Art, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario Moholy-Nagy returned to painting and the show includes a number of geometric abstractions from the 1930's and 1940's including Untitled ...
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 ...
Laszlo Moholy-Nagy’s so-called “telephone paintings,” industrially manufactured in 1923, were ordered in baked enamel on copper in small, medium and large.
Visionary artist and educator Laszlo Moholy-Nagy moved to Chicago in 1937 to transplant a revolutionary European school of design in the United States. The Bauhaus school in Germany, where Moholy h… ...
László Moholy-Nagy may be popularly remembered as the photogram man, but if the Guggenheim, Art Institute Chicago and LACMA have anything to do with it – and they do – Moholy-Nagy’s legacy is finally ...