Photography, Film, Photobook. The exibhition features more than 250 works by approximately 90 artists, with a focus on new acquisitions and groundbreaking projects by Man Ray, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Aleksandr Rodchenko, Daido Moriyama, Robert Heinecken and many more. It offers a critical reassessment of photography's role in the avant-garde and neo-avant-garde movements, and in the development of contemporary artistic practices.
The Museum of Modern Art draws from its collection to present
the exhibition The Shaping of New Visions: Photography, Film, Photobook on view from
April 18, 2012, to April 29, 2013. Filling the third-floor Edward Steichen Photography Galleries,
this installation presents more than 250 works by approximately 90 artists, with a focus on new
acquisitions and groundbreaking projects by Man Ray, László Moholy-Nagy, Aleksandr Rodchenko,
Germaine Krull, Dziga Vertov, Gerhard Rühm, Helen Levitt, Robert Frank, Daido Moriyama, Robert
Heinecken, Edward Ruscha, Martha Rosler, Bernd and Hilla Becher, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Paul
Graham, and The Atlas Group/Walid Raad. The exhibition is organized by Roxana Marcoci,
Curator, Department of Photography, The Museum of Modern Art.
Punctuated by key photographic projects, experimental films, and photobooks, The
Shaping of New Visions offers a critical reassessment of photography’s role in the avant-garde and
neo-avant-garde movements, and in the development of contemporary artistic practices. The
shaping of what came to be known as "new vision" photography in the 1920s bore the obvious
influence of "lens-based" and "time-based" works. The first gallery begins with photographs
capturing the birth of the 20th- century modern metropolis by Berenice Abbott, Edward Steichen,
and Alfred Stieglitz, presented next to the avant-garde film Manhatta (1921), a collaboration
between Paul Strand and Charles Sheeler.
The 1920s were a period of landmark constructions and scientific discoveries all related to
light—from Thomas Edison’s development of incandescent light to Albert Einstein’s theory of
relativity and light speed. Man Ray began experimenting with photograms (pictures made by
exposing objects placed on photosensitive paper to light)—which he renamed "rayographs" after
himself—in which light was both the subject and medium of his work. This exhibition presents
Man Ray’s most exquisite rayographs, alongside his first short experimental film, Le Retour à la
raison (Return to Reason, 1923), in which he extended the technique to moving images.
In 1925, two years after he joined the faculty of the Bauhaus school in Weimar Germany,
László Moholy-Nagy published his influential book Malerei, Fotografie, Film (Painting, Photography,
Film)—part of a series that he coedited with Bauhaus director Walter Gropius—in which he
asserted that photography and cinema are heralding a “culture of light” that has overtaken the
most innovative aspects of painting. Moholy-Nagy extolled photography and, by extension, film
as the quintessential medium of the future. Moholy-Nagy’s interest in the movement of objects
and light through space led him to construct Light-Space Modulator, the subject of his only
abstract film, Ein Lichtspiel: schwarz weiss grau (A Lightplay: Black White Gray, 1930), which is
presented in the exhibition next to his own photographs and those of Florence Henri.
The rise of photographic avant-gardism from the 1920s to the 1940s is traced in the
second gallery primarily through the work of European artists. A section on Constructivism and
New Objectivity features works by Paul Citroën, Raoul Hausmann, Florence Henri, Germaine Krull,
El Lissitzky, Albert Renger-Patzsch, and August Sander. A special focus on Aleksandr Rodchenko
underscores his engagement with the illustrated press through collaborations with Vladimir
Mayakovsky and Sergei Tretyakov on the covers and layouts of Novyi LEF, the Soviet avant-garde
journal of the “Left Front of the Arts,” which popularized the idea of “factography,” or the
manufacture of innovative aesthetic facts through photomechanical processes. Alongside
Rodchenko, film director Dziga Vertov redefined the medium of still and motion-picture
photography with the concept of kino-glaz (cine-eye), according to which the perfectible lens of
the camera led to the creation of a novel perception of the world. The exhibition features the final
clip of Vertov’s 1929 experimental film Chelovek s kinoapparatom (Man with a Movie Camera), in
which the eye is superimposed on the camera lens to form an indivisible apparatus fit to view,
process, and convey reality, all at once. This gallery also features a selection of Dada and
Surrealist works, including rarely seen photographs, photocollages, and photomontages by Hans
Bellmer, Claude Cahun, George Hugnet, André Kertész, Jan Lukas, and Grete Stern, alongside
such avant-garde publications as Documents and Littérature.
The third gallery features artists exploring the social world of the postwar period. On view
for the first time is a group of erotic and political typo-collages by Gerhard Rühm, a founder of the
Wiener Gruppe (1959–60), an informal group of Vienna-based writers and artists who engaged in
radical visual dialogues between pictures and texts. The rebels of street photography—Robert
Frank, William Klein, Daido Moriyama, and Garry Winogrand—are represented with a selection of
works that refute the then prevailing rules of photography, offering instead elliptical, off-kilter
styles that are as personal and controversial as are their unsparing views of postwar society. A
highlight of this section is the pioneering slide show Projects: Helen Levitt in Color (1971–74).
Capturing the lively beat, humor, and drama of New York’s street theater, Levitt’s slide projection
is shown for the first time at MoMA since its original presentation at the Museum in 1974.
Photography’s tradition in the postwar period continues in the fourth gallery, which is
divided into two sections. One section features “new topographic” works by Robert Adams, Bernd
and Hilla Becher, Stephen Shore, and Joel Sternfeld, along with a selection of Edward Ruscha’s
self-published books, in which the use of photography as mapmaking signals a conceptual thrust.
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This section introduces notable works from the 1970s by artists who embraced photography not
just as a way of describing experience, but as a conceptual tool. Examples include Eleanor Antin’s
100 Boots (1971–73), Mel Bochner’s Misunderstandings (A theory of photography) (1970), VALIE
EXPORT’s Einkreisung (Encirclement) (1976), On Kawara’s I Got Up... (1977), and Gordon Matta-
Clark’s Splitting (1974), all works that reevaluate the material and contextual definitions of
photography. The other section features two major and highly experimental recent acquisitions:
Martha Rosler’s political magnum opus Bringing the War Home (1967–72), developed in the
context of her anti-war and feminist activism, for which the artist spliced together images of
domestic bliss clipped from the pages of House Beautiful with grim pictures of the war in Vietnam
taken from Life magazine; and Sigmar Polke’s early 1970s experiments with multiple exposures,
reversed tonal values, and under-and-over exposures, which underscore the artist’s idea that “a
negative is never finished.” The unmistakably cinematic turn that photography takes in the 1980s
and early 1990s is represented with a selection of innovative works ranging from Robert
Heinecken’s Recto/Verso (1988) to Philip-Lorca diCorcia’s breakthrough Hustler series (1990–92).
The final gallery showcases major installations by a younger generation of artists whose
works address photography’s role in the construction of contemporary history. Tapping into forms
of archival reconstitution, The Atlas Group/Walid Raad is represented with My Neck Is Thinner
Than a Hair: Engines (1996–2004), an installation of 100 pictures of car-bomb blasts in Beirut
during the Lebanese civil war (1975–1990) that provokes questions about the factual nature of
existing records, the traces of war, and the symptoms of trauma. A selection from Harrell
Fletcher’s The American War (2005) brings together bootlegged photojournalistic pictures of the
U.S. military involvement in Southeast Asia, throwing into sharp focus photography's role as a
documentary and propagandistic medium in the shaping of historical memory. Jules Spinatsch’s
Panorama: World Economic Forum, Davos (2003), made of thousands of still images and three
surveillance video works, chronicles the preparations for the 2003 World Economic Forum, when
the entire Davos valley was temporarily transformed into a high security zone. A selection of Paul
Graham’s photographs from his major photobook project a shimmer of possibility (2007),
consisting of filmic haikus about everyday life in today’s America, concludes the exhibition.
The exhibition will be accompanied by an online slideshow that features new acquisitions. The site,
MoMA.org/TheShapingofNewVisions, will launch on April 18, 2012.
Image: Raoul Hausmann. Untitled. February 1931. Gelatin silver print, 5
3/8 x 4 7/16" (13.6 x 11.2 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Thomas
Walther Collection. Gift of Thomas Walther © 2012 Raoul Hausmann / Artists
Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.
Press Contact:
Sarah Jarvis, 212-708-9757 or sarah_jarvis@moma.org
The Museum of Modern Art
The Edward Steichen Photography Galleries, third floor
11 West 53 Street, New York
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