Puppen

Getty Museum

Puppen

Creator

László Moholy-Nagy

American Photographer · 1895–1946

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> The reality of our century is technology: the invention, construction and maintenance of machines. To be a user of machines is to be of the spirit of this century. Machines have replaced the transcendental spiritualism of past eras. > > --László Moholy-Nagy > > Perhaps more than any other artist in the Getty Museum collection, László Moholy-Nagy would have delighted in the presentation of his im

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Date
negative 1926–1927; print 1929
Medium
Gelatin silver print
Culture
American
Department
Photographs
Institution
Getty Museum

> László Moholy-Nagy used this setting on the balcony of the Casa Fantoni in Ascona, Switzerland for four pictures taken on the same day. One features Oskar Schlemmer, a painter and leading figure in German experimental theater, who was teaching at the Bauhaus when László Moholy-Nagy arrived there in 1923.([84.XP.124.2](http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/objects/33986/laszlo-moholy-nagy-oskar-schlemmer-american-1926-1927/)) Moholy-Nagy and Lucia Moholy had joined Schlemmer’s family for a vacation in Ascona. Relaxing on a towel in the sun, Schlemmer becomes a design element in Moholy’s camera study of light and form. The shadows of the railing produce a kind of photogram on Schlemmer’s clothing, and the angle from which the picture was taken denies traditional perspective, flattening out the composition. > > In this image Moholy placed two dolls on a piece of paper in the same location as Schlemmer, imitating his position. Without Schlemmer’s body filling the frame, the composition is even more successful in its palpable textural and tonal quality. It is also a more dramatic and menacing picture, with the dolls lying naked and helpless on the backs, trapped by the shadow grid of the railing, giving them a somewhat disturbing, Surrealist quality. Moholy-Nagy also photographed Schlemmer’s two daughters—undoubtedly the owners of the dolls—in this pose and made another variation with just one doll. The Getty collection has two other prints of the image of the two dolls (see [84.XP.124.3](http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/objects/33987/laszlo-moholy-nagy-puppen-american-1926-1927/) and [85.XP.260.194](http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/objects/57551/laszlo-moholy-nagy-puppen-american-1926-1927/)). > > Katherine Ware, *László Moholy-Nagy*, In Focus: Photographs from the J. Paul Getty Museum (Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 1995), 48. %copy; 1995 The J. Paul Getty Museum.

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