Design and the Modern Kitchen. An exhibition that examines the kitchen and its continual redesign as a barometer of changing ideologies and technologies, and explores the twentieth-century transformation of the kitchen as a space of huge symbolic and practical significance. On view from its centerpiece is MoMA's recent acquisition of an unusually complete example of the iconic 'Frankfurt Kitchen' designed in 1926-27 by Grete Schutte-Lihotzky.
The Museum of Modern Art presents Counter Space: Design and
the Modern Kitchen, an exhibition that examines the kitchen and its continual redesign as a
barometer of changing ideologies and technologies, and explores the twentieth-century
transformation of the kitchen as a space of huge symbolic and practical significance. On view
from September 15, 2010, through March 14, 2011, its centerpiece is MoMA’s recent
acquisition of an unusually complete example of the iconic “Frankfurt Kitchen.” Designed in 1926–
27 by Grete Schütte-Lihotzky, it is the earliest work by a female architect in the collection.
In the
aftermath of World War I, thousands of these kitchens were manufactured for public-housing
estates being built around Frankfurt-am-Main, Germany, as part of a comprehensive program to
modernize the city and society. Schütte-Lihotzky’s compact and ergonomic design, with its
integrated approach to storage, appliances, and work surfaces, reflected a commitment to
transforming the lives of ordinary working people on an ambitious scale. Counter Space: Design
and the Modern Kitchen comprises works drawn from the Museum’s collection, including design
objects, photography, film, prints, drawings, and paintings. The exhibition is organized by Juliet
Kinchin, Curator, and Aidan O’Connor, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Architecture and
Design, The Museum of Modern Art.
Historically, kitchens were often drab, poorly ventilated, and hidden from view in a
basement or annex, but by the end of the nineteenth century the kitchen became a bridgehead of
modern thinking in the domestic sphere. It served as a testing ground for new materials,
technologies, and power sources, where designers could also address growing modern concerns
for hygiene, efficiency, and the rational organization of space. Since the innovations of Schütte-
Lihotzky and her contemporaries in the 1920s, kitchens have continued to articulate, and at times
actively challenge, our relationships to the food we eat and popular attitudes toward the domestic
role of women, family life, consumerism, and even political ideology, as in the case of the
celebrated 1959 “Kitchen Debate” between Richard Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev in Moscow at the
height of the Cold War.
The exhibition begins in the early twentieth century with the idea of the labor-saving,
rational kitchen as a “factory” or “laboratory”. From the Frankfurt kitchen to the standardized,
stackable forms of Wagenfeld’s 1938 glass Kubus ware, and to posters issued by the British
Ministry of Information during World War II, the dominant ethos is one of work, thrift, and
hygiene. The next section continues the themes of ergonomic, functional design and technological
innovation while steadily shifting the emphasis to consumer choice and the “leisure” kitchen, as
captured in colorful 1950s Tupperware and Tom Wesselmann’s exuberant Still Life #30 collage of
1963. The final part of the exhibition restores a human element to the kitchen—in reality an
environment of mess, neurosis, and frustration as well as aesthetic pleasure, sociability, and
desire. Photographs, prints, media works and sculptural installations highlight the kitchen-related
imagery that has permeated artistic practice since the late 1960s as a means of addressing larger
debates around economics, politics, and gender.
The sections hinge around the installation of the Frankfurt Kitchen and a 1968 mobile fold-
out unit manufactured by the Italian company Snaidero. These two complete kitchens are
complemented by a variety of design objects, many of which represent the changing times:
appliances powered by gas and electricity (the earliest a 1907 kettle designed by Peter Behrens
for AEG); aluminum, heat-resistant glass and steel cooking utensils featured in MoMA’s landmark
1934 Machine Art exhibition; colorful plastics ranging from Colombini’s 1957 bucket to Japanese
artificial ‘display’ food from the 1970s; and architectural plans, posters, archival photographs,
printed ephemera, and selected artworks, all drawn from MoMA’s collection, including pieces by
Cindy Sherman, William Eggleston, Andy Warhol, and Claes Oldenburg. Also on view are rarely
seen industrial films by manufacturing giants such as General Electric, spanning back as far as
1915, and stills from Hollywood films that helped to prime consumer desire for modern kitchens
and appliances.
Throughout the exhibition prominence is given to the contribution of women, not only as
the primary consumers and users of the domestic kitchen, but also as reformers, architects,
designers, and as artists who have critically addressed kitchen culture and myths.
Modern Women: Women Artists at The Museum of Modern Art
This exhibition is presented in conjunction with MoMA’s publication of Modern Women: Women
Artists at The Museum of Modern Art. Featuring illustrated essays by nearly 50 writers, including
both MoMA curators and outside scholars, Modern Women: Women Artists at The Museum of
Modern Art presents a variety of generational and cultural perspectives and a diverse range of
artists whose works span the spectrum of mediums and genres in the Museum’s collection. It is
published by The Museum of Modern Art and is available at MoMA Stores and online at
www.MoMAstore.org. It is distributed to the trade through Distributed Art Publishers (D.A.P) in the
United States and Canada, and through Thames + Hudson outside North America. The publication
is made possible by the Modern Women’s Fund, established by Sarah Peter. 512 pages, 402
illustrations. Hardcover, $70.00.
Press Contact: D’Arcy Drollinger, 212-708-9747 or darcy_drollinger@moma.org
Press Preview: Tuesday, September 14, 10:00 a.m.−12:00 p.m.
The Museum of Modern Art MoMa
The Michael H. Dunn Gallery, Second Floor
11 West 53 Street, New York USA
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Wednesday 10:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m.
Thursday 10:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m.
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Friday 10:30 a.m.–8:00 p.m.
Saturday 10:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m.