The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Monday, May 20, 2013
 
Design 1880-1980 Includes Visionary Objects from MoMA's Design Collection
Paolo Lomazzi (Italian, born 1936), Donato D'Urbino (Italian, born 1935), and Jonathan De Pas (Italian, 1932-1991), Blow Inflatable Armchair. 1967. PVC plastic. Manufactured by Zanotta S.p.A., Italy. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of the manufacturer.
NEW YORK, NY.- The Museum of Modern Art has reinstalled the modern design section of The Philip Johnson Architecture and Design Galleries on the third floor. Shaping Modernity: Design 1880–1980, on view from December 23, 2009, to July of 2010, features a selection of visionary objects, graphics, architectural fragments, and textiles from the Museum’s collection that reveal the attempts of successive generations to shape their experience of living in the modern world. The installation features 300 works organized into five sections: Art Nouveau objects and posters from 1890 to 1914; the graphic design movement known as the ―New Typography‖ (1927–37); works that focus on the relationship of machine, body, and mind (1925–40); the Good Design movement (1944–56); and works from the 1960s and 1970s. The reinstallation is organized by Juliet Kinchin, Curator, and Aidan O’Connor, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Architecture and Design, The Museum of Modern Art.

The installation is organized into the following sections:

The International New Art 1890–1914
The International New Art (1890–1914) flourished in urban centers around the world taking on many localized forms and names (among them Art Nouveau, Jugendstil, Arte Modernista, Sezession, and Glasgow Style). Hector Guimard (French, 1867–1942), the leading figure of the movement in France, looked to the natural world to revitalize modern forms. His personal desk and armchair (c. 1899) exemplify the Art Nouveau style with organic, especially inspired by flowers and other plants, and flowing curvilinear forms. The pieces in this installation were used in the office of the MoMA’s founding director, Alfred H. Barr, Jr. Other examples in the exhibition include a side chair (1897) by Charles Rennie Mackintosh (British, 1868–1928), a side table (1901) by Mackay Hugh Baillie Scott (British, 1865–1945), and a plaster cast of Antoni Gaudí’s (Spanish, 1852–1926) original finial sculpture for the Church of the Sagrada Familia in Barcelona.

The poster movement of the 1890s was a new phenomenon that emphasized connections between the graphic and fine arts. Many of the graphics of this time embodied the New Art style. Jules Chéret (French, 1836-1932) was one of the most famous printmakers of the late nineteenth century and is credited as the originator of the artistic lithographic poster. His poster Folies-Bergère, La Loïe Fuller (1893) features the American dancer Loïe Fuller. A video of Fuller dancing is also included. Among the other works are Mackintosh’s poster for the magazine The Scottish Musical Review (1896) and Jan Toorop’s (Dutch, 1858–1928) Het Hoogeland Beekbergen (1896), which advertises a rehabilitation center for the destitute.

New Typography 1927–37
In the 1920s and 1930s the movement known as the ―New Typography‖ brought graphics and information design to the forefront of artistic avant-gardes in Europe. Rejecting traditional arrangement of type in symmetrical columns, modernist designers organized the printed page or poster as a blank field in which blocks of type and illustration (frequently photomontage) could be arranged in harmonious, strikingly asymmetrical compositions. Taking his lead from currents in Soviet Russia and at the Weimar Bauhaus, the designer Jan Tschichold (Swiss, b. Germany, 1902–1974) codified the movement with accessible guidelines in his landmark book Die Neue Typographie (1928). Almost overnight, typographers and printers adapted this way of working for a huge range of printed matter, from business cards and brochures to magazines, books, and advertisements. This installation of posters and numerous small-scale works is drawn from MoMA’s rich collection of Soviet Russian, German, Dutch, and Czechoslovak graphics. They represent material from Tschichold’s own collection, which supported his teaching and publication from around 1927 to 1937.

Included in the exhibition are 14 posters by Tschichold, Ladislav Sutnar (American, b. Bohemia [now Czech Republic], 1897–1976), Johannes Molzahn (German, 1892–1965), Theo H. Ballmer (Swiss, 1902–1965), and others, as well as small-scale letterpress works and objects by Herbert Bayer (American, b. Austria, 1900–1985), Frantisek Kalivoda (Czech, 1913–1971), Zdenek Rossmann (Czech, 1905–1984), Joost Schmidt (German, 1893–1948), and Aleksandr Rodchenko (Russian, 1891–1956).

Mind, Body, Machine 1925–40
The tone of this section is set by a giant railroad-car spring and a boat propeller first shown in MoMA’s landmark Machine Art exhibition in 1934, which celebrated such items of anonymous industrial design as symbols of social improvement and technological progress. The theme is further explored in utilitarian objects such as a streamlined meat-slicer (given in memory of the ―Yippie‖ leader Abbie Hoffman), and the Vipp trash can, designed for a Danish hair salon.

Among the other works in this section are A. M. Cassandre’s (French, 1901–1968) iconic billboard for the Ford Motor Company from 1937. By employing Cassandre, Ford Motors infused their corporate reputation for industrial innovation with the artistic cachet of European modernism. The poster features a giant eye with the slogan ―Watch the Fords Go By,‖ which gives a sense of modern vision in motion, while the V8 icon imprinted on the iris suggests a fusion of mind, body, and technology. Also included are amorphous aluminum coffee tables (1935–38) designed by Frederick Kiesler (American, b. Romania, 1890–1965), and Eileen Gray’s (British, b. Ireland, 1879–1976) elegant lacquered screen (1922).

What Was Good Design? MoMA’s Message 1944–56
The section What Was Good Design? MoMA’s Message 1944–56, which opened in May of 2009, presents over 100 selections from the Museum’s collection—ranging from domestic furnishings and appliances to textiles, sporting goods, and graphics—to illuminate the primary values of Good Design as promoted by MoMA within an international debate conducted by museums, design councils, and department stores. Iconic pieces by designers including Marcel Breuer (American, b. Hungary, 1902–1981), Charles (American, 1907–1978) and Ray (American, 1912–1988) Eames, Eero Saarinen (American, b. Finland, 1910–1961), and Hans Wegner (Danish, 1914–2007) are shown alongside more unexpected items such as a hunting bow and a plumb bob, as well as everyday objects including an iron, a hamper, a rake, a cheese slicer, and Tupperware.

Continuity and Critique 1960–80
The clean and elegant forms of classic modernism continued to appear in the domestic appliances of Dieter Rams (German, b. 1932) for Braun, and the Vignelli Associates’ stacking plastic dinnerware. For many however, the emphasis on pop music, youth, and counterculture opened up new possibilities in materials, colors, and forms, as well as more humorous, expendable design. The Blow Inflatable Armchair (1967) designed by Jonathan De Pas (Italian, 1932–1991), Paolo Lomazzi (Italian, b. 1936) and Donato D'Urbino (Italian, b. 1935) became a landmark of Pop furniture and an icon of 1960s Italian design. Executed in candy-colored PVC plastic, it was more affordable than many other contemporary works. Ugo La Pietra’s (Italian, b. 1938) Uno sull'altro (One on Top of the Other) Stacking Shelves (1970) exemplifies the strong interest at this time in flexible design suited to new ideas regarding lifestyles and domestic environments.

The Museum of Modern Art | Shaping Modernity | Art Nouveau | New Typography | Juliet Kinchin | Aidan O' Connor |


Last Week News

December 22, 2009

Over 1,000 Unpublished Letters and Postcards by Joan Miró See the Light of Day

$12-Million Gift from Mandel Family Goes to Israel Museum

Pope Benedict XVI Says Visit to Holocaust Memorial 'Upsetting'

Ahlen Art Museum to Present a Special Exhibition "Intimacy! Bathing in Art"

New Works on Paper Section Attracts First-Time Exhibitors to TEFAF Maastricht

ARCOmadrid_2010 was Officially Presented at Museo Reina Sofia

Third Solo Exhibition for Esteban Pastorino Díaz at PDNB Gallery

London to Hold Year Long Celebration of Stamps, Design and Postal Heritage

Second Solo Show for Oliver Laric at Seventeen Gallery

Pop Up Exhibition on View at the Empire State Building

Scream Gallery Winter Exhibition Features Hopper, Doherty & Wood

Snite Museum of Art to Show Selected Drawings from Weisberg Collection

Museum Exhibits Pictures Drawn by Delta Passengers

Zabludowicz Collection Anounces Largest Ever Showcase of Works from its Collection

The Nelson-Atkins Explores New Narrative Pathways and Inventive Cinematic Experiences

Vaclava Spala Gallery in Prague Shows "Symbio: a Digital Heartbeat"

Chagall Exhibit Pulled from Troubled Fresno Museum

Arne Quinze Exhibits a Selection of Works from His Africa Electronica Exhibition

Tino Sehgal to Create a Special Mise-en-Scene at the Guggenheim

December 21, 2009

Franz Ackermann Fills the Rooms of the Kunstmuseum Bonn with Colorful Paintings

MOCA Elects Trustees Peter M. Brant, Steven T. Mnuchin, and Victor Pinchuk

Egypt Antiquities Chief Zahi Hawass to Demand Nefertiti Bust

Polish Police Find Stolen Auschwitz "Arbeit Macht Frei" Sign

Gagosian to Present Ed Ruscha's Artist Book of a Classic Novel by Jack Kerouac

IVAM Opens Exhibition which "Tells a Story in Five Rooms"

MoMA Adds Evening Hours on the First Thursday of Each Month

University of the Arts Hosts First Group Exhibition of Women's Pop Art

Michael Hoppen Contemporary to Present Photographer Kishin Shinoyama's Images

Camden Arts Centre Announces Exhibition by Anna Maria Maiolino

Significant Watercolours and Shields Secured for Ayrshire

Leading Russian and Eastern European Artists to Exhibit at Calvert 22

Kunsthal Rotterdam Opens Exhibition Made in Holland

Milestones to Celebrate South Carolina Artists Age 70 and Beyond

Savannah College of Art and Design Presents "Caught Captive" by Erick Swenson

Green Cardamom to Show New Work by Pakistani Artist Bani Abidi

Michael Schulhof Elected to Board of Trustees of Guggenheim Foundation

Vassar College to Celebrate the Arts with 8th Annual Modfest

Jennifer Bartenbach Promoted to Acting Director of Finance at the Indianapolis Museum of Art

Matthew Barney to Speak at Detroit Institute of Arts

December 20, 2009

Park Avenue Armory Selects Christian Boltanski to Create Monumental Installation

Maurizio Cattelan's First Solo Show in the U.S. Since 2003 to Open at the Menil Collection

Casino Mogul Wynn Bought Record Rembrandt: Report

Regen Projects Celebrates 20th Anniversary with Glenn Ligon Exhibition

Gagosian Publishes Definitive Survey of Jeff Koons's "Hulk Elvis" Paintings

TEFAF DESIGN to Present Rare and Influential Pieces in 2010

Tapestries Created by Renowned Artists to be Shown at James Cohan Gallery

The Morris Museum of Art Embarks Upon Reinstallation of Its Permanent Collection

Metropolitan Museum of Art Announces Landmark Picasso Exhibition

Film by Oscar Award-Winning Director Caroline Link will Screen at MoMA

Apron Chronicles Exhibition Brings Apron Curator to Myrtle Beach Art Museum

Reward Offered for Stolen Auschwitz Death Camp Sign

Studies on Guggenheim Museum Bilbao Expansion in Urdaibai Presented

First Retrospective of Monumental Symbolic Realist Ralph Borge at Hearst Art Gallery

Mississippi Museum of Art Announces Jim Henson Exhibit

Brandywine River Museum to Show Cartoons and Caricatures from the Collection

Barbican Art Gallery Announces Next "The Curve" Commission by Céleste Boursier Mougenot

First Museum Exhibition of Lucian Freud Etchings in Canada Announced

History of Mexico within Reach of Passersby on Madero Street

December 19, 2009

National Museum of Singapore Opens "Quest for Immortality: The World of Ancient Egypt"

Butler Art Museum Receives Jackson Pollock Painting

SFMOMA Celebrates 75th Anniversary with Anniversary Exhibition

Christie's to Offer Historical Collection from Newton Hall in January

Indianapolis Museum of Art Commissions Heather Rowe for Installation Series

Sotheby's to Sell Chinese Export Porcelain from Collection of Elinor Gordon

Survey of Rolf Iseli's Fifty-Year-Career Opens at Kunstmuseum Bern

Auschwitz 'Arbeit Macht Frei' ("Work Sets You Free") Sign Stolen

MATRIX Program at Wadsworth Atheneum Presents Best of Emerging Artists

World Conservation and Exhibitions Center: Planning Permission Granted

National Gallery Embarks on New Partnership with the Art Gallery of Alberta

Brooklyn Museum Announces Major Fashion Exhibition

Weeklong Run at MoMA for Director Amos Gitai's 'Carmel'

Smithsonian American Art Museum to Display Arts and Crafts Made by Japanese Americans in World War II

Anna Cutler Appointed Tate's First Director of Learning

New Exhibition Celebrates Frye Founding Collection

The Art of the Frame: Exploring the Holdings of the Alte Pinakothek

Gleaming Steel Graft Installed in National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden by Artist Roxy Paine

Contemporary Art Museum Announces Short Exhibitions by Artists and Others

An Open Call for Artists to Propose Public Projects to Creative Time and P.S. 1 Curators

December 18, 2009

Exhibition Offers Journey into the Most Enigmatic and Mysterious Artist of the Renaissance

Stolen Painting by Leonardo Goes Back on View at the National Galleries in Scotland

Anniversary Benefit Exhibition Announced at the Guggenheim

Getty Museum Acquires a Bronze Vase by Jean-Désiré Ringel d'Illzach

Exhibition Featuring Photos of Andy Warhol's Infamous Factory to Open

The Art Fund and Crafts Council Repeat Collect Challenge for UK Curators

Neither Coming Nor Going, Zhang Huan's Second Solo Show at PaceWildenstein

Vibrant New Arts and Cultural Center Announced at Regent Park

Two Prints by Ansel Adams were Top Lots at Swann Galleries' Auction

Monument Lifted from Cleopatra's Underwater City in the Mediterranean Sea

School of the Art Institute of Chicago Presents "Picturing the Studio"

Dalí Universe Places Salvador Dalí Sculptures on Ski Slopes in Courchevel

A Selection from the David J. Azrieli Collection Opens at Tel Aviv Museum

Original or Replica? Works by the Legendary Caravaggio at Nationalmuseum this Spring

Museum of London Docklands Delivers New Display

Three Gems Saved for Seaton Delaval by The Art Fund

Kunsthaus Zurich Announces Program to Celebrate 100th Anniversary

Bellevue Arts Museum Elects 8 New Members to its Board of Trustees

Editor of 'Blueprint Magazine' Appointed as Director Architecture, Design, Fashion, British Council

December 17, 2009

El Greco to Picasso: Exhibition of the Most Representative Works of the Santander Collection

Sotheby's to Sell "The Former Peter Stuyvesant Collection"

Major Royal Academy Art Show Canceled Over Seized Painting

Larry Sultan, Photographer and Longtime CCA Faculty Member, Dies at 63

Man Arrested for Breaking Sculpture by Bernardi Roig

Timothy Taylor Gallery Announces Exhibition of New Paintings by Alex Katz

Cathey McClain Finlon Named President of Denver Art Museum

Indianapolis Museum of Art to Exhibit Fifty Years of Iconic Couture in Spring 2010

Polk Museum of Art Announces Hiring of New Curator of Art

Museum of Modern Art to Present Frederick Wiseman Retrospective

Galerie Lelong Presents "Hélio Oiticica: Drawings, 1954-58"

Antiquities Chief Says Ancient Egyptian Wall Paintings to Return to Luxor

S.M.A.K. to Open Retrospective of Work by Belgian Artist Koen van den Broek

Fundacion ICO Presents the Architecture of Raili and Reima Pietila

Second Solo Exhibition Continues Minneapolis Institute of Arts Photography Series

Metropolitan Museum Celebrates 35th Anniversary of Packard Collection Acquisition

Art Miami's 20th Anniversary Edition Celebrates Strong Attendance and Sales

Impressionist Painting to Contemporary Photography Juxtaposed in Exhibition at the Dallas Museum of Art

Another Resounding Success for Freeman's Fine American & European Paintings & Sculpture Sale

Silkeborg Museum of Art: In the Process of Being Transformed and Revitalized

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD

Related Stories



Recently Acquired Peformance Art Piece by Allora & Calzadilla Debuts at MoMA

Recently Acquired Peformance Art Piece by Allora & Calzadilla Debuts at MoMA

20th Century Modern Design from the Museum of Modern Art Coming to Atlanta Next Spring

MoMA Announces Exhibition of Picasso's Iconic Guitar Sculptures From 1912-1914

MoMA to Present the Most Extensive Exhibition of Weimar Cinema Ever Mounted in the U.S.

Christophe Cherix Appointed Chief Curator of Prints and Illustrated Books at MoMA

MoMA Appoints Laura Hoptman as Curator in the Department of Painting and Sculpture

MoMA Appoints Laura Hoptman as Curator in the Department of Painting and Sculpture

Broad Survey of Abstract Expressionism Draws from MoMA's Renowned Collection

Exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art Explores the Role of Contemporary Architecture



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site