The Museum of Modern Art

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The Museum of Modern Art U West 53 Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 Tel. 956-6100 Cable: Modernart N0 12A 3^ WALL LABEL KERTESZ, R0DCHENK0 AND MOHOLY-NAGY: PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE COLLECTION January 28 - April 7, 1974 These forty photographs were made in the 1920s and 1930s by three of this century's most gifted photographers: Andre Kertesz, Alexander Rodchenko and Laszlo Moholy-Nagy. Uniting these works beyond the Central European origins of their makers and the calendrical time in which they were made are several factors. Most obvious,perhaps, is the dizzying vantage point embodied in the vision many of them record: in pointing the camera down at the earth, the horizon line is displaced or completely eliminated, and the result for the viewer is a kind of vertigo at once disturbing and pleasurable. It is as if one suddenly were able to fly. In leaving the surface of the earth one enters a new world, a world abstracted from the old. Kasimir Malevich, the Russian Suprematist painter and theoretician, in The Non-Objective World (Berlin, 1927) wrote: The ascent to the summit of non-figurative art is difficult... Accustomed things fall away gradually, and at every step objects fade further and further into the distance, until finally the world of pre-conceived notions all that we loved and all that we depended on for life completely disappears from sight. Also functioning in many of the photographs is a tension between the actual flatness of the picture plane and the illusion of three-dimensional space. The use of distortion, abstraction, negative images, and the cutting off of objects by the picture frame so they are no longer recognizable, all emphasize the picture as a flat pattern. The deep space provided by the use of a high vantage point contradicts the flatness while at the same time the unusual viewpoint makes orientation to the space difficult. (more)

NO. 12A Page 2 Andre Kertesz was born in Hungary in 189A. He moved to Paris in 1925 where he met and photographed many of the artists and writers who lived there. Since 1936 he has lived and worked in New York City. Kertesz has created a large and distinguished body of work whose richness can only be suggested by the photographs shown here. In contrast to the photographs of Moholy- Nagy and Rodchenko, Kerteszfs appear more elegant, supple, and diverse. He uses his camera, too, not as they have (as a machine for better seeing or a knife to dissect society),but as a beloved extension of his own self, holding it, one imagines, as carefully as one holds a child. Alexander Rodchenko was born in St. Petersburg in 1891. He was trained as a painter but under the influence of Malevich and Tatlin he renounced painting in 1922, turning his energies to "socially useful" activities of photography and design. Closest of these three to what one critic has termed "the Hegelian romantic negation" of this period, Rodchenko's work is brash, graphic, and incisive while at the same time (particularly in the portrait of his wife, Varvara Stepanova) tender, subtle, and deeply moving. He died in Moscow in 1956. Laszlo Moholy-Nagy was born in Hungary in 1895 a year after Kertesz. He studied law before succumbing to an interest in art, moved to Berlin and from 1923 to 1928 taught at the Bauhaus. Deeply influenced by the theories of Malevich and Russian Constructivism, Moholy-Nagy embraced photography, urging that everyone learn to photograph to avoid suffering from a modern form of illiteracy. His work is highly inventive, exploring techniques unique to photography including negative prints, photograms, and photomontage. In 1938 he founded the School of Design in Chicago where he taught until his death in 1946. The prints exhibited here were part of Moholy-Nagy?s first oneman exhibition in America at the Delphic Gallery in New York in 1931. Dennis Longwell

The Museum of Modern Art H west 53 Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 Tel. 956-6100 Cable: Modernart CHECKLIST KERTESZ,R0DCHENK0, and M0H0LY-NAGY: Photographs from the Collection January 28 - AP r i l V> KERTESZ, Andre American, born Hungary 189*+ 22. Mondrian's Studio. 37. Satiric Dancer. 16. Leger's Studio with Assistant. 1. 26. 9. 17. Montmartre. 1926 9 1/2 x 7 5/8 310.65 1926 13 1/2 x 10 1/2 IOOO.69 1927 1927 18 3/8 x 12 9/16 320.65 6x8 316.65 Marionettes de Pilsener. Touraine. 197^ 1929 9 5 / 8 x 7 7/8 622.kl 1930 16 3/8 x 11 7/8 98U.69 Chagall Family. 1933 7 x 9 la 311.65 3^. Distortion #126. R0DCHENK0, Alexander 1933 k 1/2 x 6 317.65 Russian, I89I-I956 30. V. V. (Vladimir) Mayakowski. 15. Assembling for a Demonstration. 1*+. At the Telephone. 1928 I92U I928 The Parkinson Fund 22 1/2 x 16 5^.70 Mr. and Mrs John Spencer Fund 19 1/2 x 13 7/8 55.70 Mr. and Mrs. John Spencer Fund 15 x 11 56.70 (over)

RODCHENKO, Alexander -2- Russian, I89I-I956 10. Untitled (Railroad Station). 1928 3- Untitled (street). 1928 5. Belomorsk Canal. 1933 21. Moscow. 1931 k. Rehearsal, Belomorsk Canal. 1933 32. Rumba. 1935 Negative print with colored pencil 28. V. (Varvara) Stepanova. 1935 31. Parade on Red Square. 1936 39. Parade. 1936 1+0. Sport Parade, Champions of Moscow. 1937 r Gift of Alfred H. Barr 1 9 x 6 1 / 2 ' ' 220.70 Gift of Alfred H. Barr 1 87/8x6 1/2 221.70 17 3/ 1 * x 11 1/2 1+7-70 11 1/2 x 9 1.71 11 3/8 x 17 l/k 48.70 8 7/8x6 3/8 1+6.70 The Parkinson Fund Ik 7/8 x 10 52.70 David H. McAlpin Fund 11 1/8 x 18 7/8 50.70 David H. McAlpin Fund 10 3/1+ x 18 1+9.70 David H. McAlpin Fund 18 5/8 x 10 3/8 53.70 Jr M0H0LY-NAGY, Laszl6 American, born Hungary I895-I9I+6 38. Chute. 1923 Collage of halftone reproductions of photographs, airbrush, pen and ink. 11. Notre Dame de Paris. 1925 Gift of Sibyl 25 x 19 19.65 9 1/8x6 5/8 502.39 Moholy-M 12. Ascona. 1926 11+ 3/8 x 10 7/8 1*76.39 (more)

-3- MOHOLY-NAGY, Laszl6 American, born Hungary 1895-1946 20. Composition. 1926. Negative print from a positive transparency 29. Head. c. 1926 18. From Radio Tower, Berlin. 1928 Also titled "Topographical Design, No. 1" 19. From Radio Tower, Berlin. 1928 Also titled Topographical Design, No. 2" 24. The Diving Board. 1929 36. Nude. 1929 Negative print from positive transparency 35. Nudes on the Grass. 1929 Negative print from positive transparency 6. The Street, Winter, Berlin, n.d. Anonymous Gift 8 1/4 x 6 1/2 491.39 14 1/8 x 10 l/k 505.39 13 1/2 x 10 1/2 1+84.39 10 13/16 x 8 1/8 485-39 11 1/8 x 8 1/8 480.39 10 1/2 x 8 505.39 8 5/8 x 11 5/8 486.39 11 5/8 x 8 5/8 483.39 33. After the Bath. n.d. 11 l/k x 8 1/8 482.39 2. The Boardwalk, n.d. 10 7/8 x 7 1/2 479.39 7. Geometry and Texture of Landscape, n.d. 11 1/8 x 8 1/8 500.39 27. Head. n.d. Negative print from positive transparency 23. Photogram. n.d. With pencilled additions 9 1/4x6 7/8 509.39 6 5/8x9 1/8 490.39 (over)

-4- MOHOLY-NAGY, Laszl6, American, born Hungary 1895-19^6 13. Repose, n.d. Ik x 10 3/8 V78.39 25. Siesta, n.d. 8 7/8x6 1/1+ *W.39 8. The Water's Edge, n.d. 11 1/1+ x 8 3/8 V73.39