LÁSZLÓ MOHOLY-NAGY (1894-1946)

Untitled photogram, Dessau, 1925

细节
LÁSZLÓ MOHOLY-NAGY (1894-1946)
Untitled photogram, Dessau, 1925
gelatin silver print
9 3/8 x 7in. (23.8 x 17.8cm.)
来源
The Estate of László Moholy-Nagy;
to William Larson, Philadelphia; acquired before 1983
出版
Moholy-Nagy - The Photograms: Catalogue raisonné. Edited by Renate Heyne and Floris M. Neusüss, in collaboration with Hattula Moholy-Nagy. Stuttgart: Hatje Cantz, 2009, cat. no. fgm 421

荣誉呈献

Elizabeth Eichholz
Elizabeth Eichholz

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拍品专文

Moholy-Nagy's lifetime fascination with light led him to experiment with painting, sculpture, cinema and photography. He believed that the manipulation of light through any means could lead to new ways of seeing that would liberate us from traditional pictorial conventions. Turning to experiment with photograms beginning in 1922 he dispensed not only with brushwork in painting but the intervention of the lens in photography.

A photogram is made by placing objects on a sheet of photographic paper. Where the paper is uncovered, it received maximum exposure to light and the tone is darkest. Where the paper received no exposure to light, the tone is lightest. Middle tones result from the relative amount of exposure between those extremes.

One of the objects used to make the present photogram is a clothes pin which clearly dates it to 1925 when he was working in Dessau at the Bauhaus.