LÁSZLÓ MOHOLY–NAGY (1895–1946)
LÁSZLÓ MOHOLY–NAGY (1895–1946)
LÁSZLÓ MOHOLY–NAGY (1895–1946)
LÁSZLÓ MOHOLY–NAGY (1895–1946)
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Always in Style: Property from the Collection of Herbert Kasper
LÁSZLÓ MOHOLY–NAGY (1895–1946)

Untitled Photogram, 1939

Details
LÁSZLÓ MOHOLY–NAGY (1895–1946)
Untitled Photogram, 1939
gelatin silver print
signed and dated in pencil, inscribed 'to Charlie/ with best wishes/ and friendship' with signature and date, all in ink (verso)
image/sheet: 15 3/4 x 19 3/4 in. (40 x 50 cm.)
Provenance
From the artist to Charles W. Niedringhaus;
Sotheby’s New York, October 15, 2007, lot 29;
Galerie Kicken, Berlin;
acquired from the above by the present owner, 2008.
Literature
László Moholy-Nagy, Moholy-Nagy: The Photograms: Catalogue Raisonné, Hatje Cantz, Ostfildern, 2009, pl. 381, p. 276.
Jordan Bear et al., Mannerism and Modernism: the Kasper collection of drawings and photographs, Pierpont Morgan Library, New York, 2011, pl. 68, p.157.

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Rebecca Jones
Rebecca Jones Associate Vice President, Specialist, Head of Department

Lot Essay

László 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 also with the use of a lens in photography.

A photogram is made by placing objects directly on a sheet of photographic paper. Where the paper is uncovered, it receives maximum exposure to light and the tone is darkest and where the paper receives no exposure to light, the tone is lightest. Moholy used this photogram process as an opportunity to fix light and shadow directly onto the photographic paper without a camera, creating a 'vision in motion' and the 'absolute filmic art'. He often experimented with making subsequent prints using the original photograms as negatives, and with producing enlargements for exhibition purposes.

According to the congenial inscription on the verso of this photogram, this work was gifted by Moholy to Charles W. Niedringhaus, an artist who himself experimented with the photogram technique.

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