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BIOGRAPHIES
MOHOLY-NAGY, LASZLO
Hungry, 1895-1946
Hungarian painter, designer, and experimental photographer. He
turned to art after studying law. While living in Berlin he was
one of the founders of constructivism, experimenting with photograms
and translucent materials. As a professor in the newly opened Bauhaus
from 1923 to 1928, Moholy-Nagy was coeditor with Walter Gropius
of the school’s regular publications. While there he experimented
with a form of kinetic art, which he called “light space modulators,”
a stunning array of motor-driven shapes that he illuminated to produce
elaborate shadows on the nearby walls. He worked in Berlin until
1934 as a typographer and designer of stage sets.
In 1937 he directed the Bauhaus School of Design in Chicago until
it failed (1938). Thereafter he opened the Chicago Institute of
Design, which he headed until his death. His greatest contribution
to modern art lay in his teaching, which deeply influenced American
commercial and industrial design. He was the author of The New Vision
(tr. 1928) and Vision in Motion (1947).
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