Chronology

1895 Born on 20 July in Borsod, later Bácsborsod, in southern Hungary.
His father, foreman of a wealthy estate, leaves the family when the children are young. László, his mother, and his younger brother, Ákos, are later taken into the home of his uncle, the lawyer Dr Gusztáv Nagy, who lives in the town of Moholy, present-day Mol, in Serbia. His older brother, Jenô, is sent to live in Szeged.


1905 Begins secondary school in the town of Szeged.

1911 Some of his early poems are published in the Szeged daily newspapers.

1913 Enrolls as a law student at the University of Budapest.


1915 Enlists in the Austro-Hungarian Army as an artillery officer.
During his wartime service, he makes colored sketches, many on postcards, some of which he sends to his family and friends. He also documents his war experiences in watercolor and crayon drawings, depicting wounded and fallen soldiers and barbed wire landscapes.


1917 He is wounded on the Russian Front.
After his convalescence in Budapest he goes on reserve status.Publishes poems, short stories and book reviews in the short-lived literary magazine Jelenkor (The Present Time) founded by Iván Hevesy and others, until it is discontinued the following year.


1918 After his discharge from the army, he abandons his law studies to become an artist. Attends evening classes in life drawing at a free art school in Budapest. Studies the Old Masters, identifies with German Expressionism and the Russian avant-garde. Exhibits for the first time with other artists, showing watercolours at the National Salon, Budapest. Comes into contact with Hungarian avant-garde artists.


1919 In March he is included in an exhibition at the Mücsarnok (Hall of Art)
Moves to Szeged in August where he works as an artist in a studio community with the Activist sculptor, Sándor Gergely, with whom he exhibits in November.
At the end of the year, he moves to Vienna where he stays for six weeks. Here he socializes with the Ma artists group centered around Lajos Kassák. He is influenced by the Cubist-Expressionist work of his friends, Lajos Tihanyi and Sándor Bortnyik.


1920 Moves to Berlin at the beginning of the year. He receives help from the German and American Quakers working in Berlin. Makes contact with German Dadaists and Der Sturm (The Storm) Gallery.

Meets Lucia Schulz in April, who studied art history and philosophy in Prague and has a keen interest in photography. Development of material collages for first Constructivist works, including Glasarchitektur-Bilder. In October his work is included in an exhibition at Galerie Fritz Gurlitt in Berlin.


1921 Marries Lucia Schulz in January. Horizont, a collection of his Dadaist art, is published by Ma.

In 1921 he begins writing the film scenario for “Dynamic of the Metropolis”, published in Ma in Hungarian in 1924, and later in German in Volume 8 in the Bauhaus Books Series, Malerei Photografie Film (Painting, Photography, Film). 

1920/1922 sees the conception of Moholy-Nagy’s own form of Constructivism.
In April, he is made the Berlin representative for Ma, a post he holds until 1925.

1922 In February he exhibits with László Péri at the Der Sturm gallery in Berlin. His work includes paintings and metal sculptures and ‘Reliefs’ made of found objects of glass, wood and metal.

Creates the so-called Telephone pictures, five works of enamel on steel reproduced by machine. Moholy meets Walter Gropius, who visits his Sturm exhibition. Reproduction of his works in the 1 May celebratory issue of Ma.

In May attends the “First International Congress for Progressive Artists” in Düsseldorf as representative of the Ma group. Attends the Dadaists’ and Constructivists’ conference in Weimar.

Strongly influenced by Kurt Schwitters who is co-organiser of the Constructivist artists’ meetings in Hanover. Spends the summer in the Rhön with his wife, Lucia, where he is inspired to begin making photograms, which he produces with her help and knowledge of photography. These first photograms are made in daylight on copying-out paper. The article “Produktion-Reproduktion” is published in De Stijl in July.

First sketches of the Light Space Modulator, which is exhibited in 1930. Publishes together with Lajos Kassák A könyve új müvészek (The Book of New Artists) in Hungarian and German, an anthology of modern art and poetry published in Ma. December - together with Alfred Kemény writes the manifesto “Dynamisch-konstruktives Kraftsystem” (Constructive System of Forces) published in Der Sturm.


1923 February - second Sturm exhibition with László Péri.
Exhibits at the Kestner-Gesellschaft in Hanover.

Publication of the Kestner-portfolio Nr. 6 (six lithographs).
Invited by Gropius to the Staatliche Bauhaus in Weimar in March; he takes over the foundation course from Johannes Itten and the metal workshop from Paul Klee, bringing a new Constructivist direction to the Bauhaus.

Publishes linoleum and woodcuts in Der Sturm.

In the 1920s publishes extensively on photography, typography, new arrangements in music and light composition.

In August and September participates in the Bauhaus Exhibition in Weimar.


1924 February - third Sturm exhibition with Hugo Scheiber, including five Telephone Pictures.

Participates in the Sturm section of the First German Art Exhibition in Moscow.
Collaboration with Oskar Schlemmer and Farkas Molnár in theatre, dance and ballet stage design; also works in architectural and mural design.

Plans a series of Bauhaus newsletters, a project not realised. Starts work with Gropius on the Bauhaus Books series, with 50 volumes originally planned.
In addition to the traditional technique of painting on canvas, he starts to use synthetic materials such as aluminium, celluloid, and opaque plastics.

Experiments with photo collages, which he calls photoplastics.

1925 In March has his final exhibition at Der Sturm.
Moves with the Bauhaus to Dessau.

The first Bauhaus Books are published. By 1930 fourteen volumes have appeared. Moholy-Nagy designs all but three volumes.

Publication of the book, Die Bühne im Bauhaus (The theatre of the Bauhaus) with F. Molnár and O. Schlemmer as Volume 4 of the Bauhaus Books series. This work includes the conceived idea of a Theatre of Totality and the essay “Theater, Zirkus, Varieté”; also the vision of a theatre of form, movement, tone, light, colour and odors in the form of a Partiturskizze zu einer mechanischen Exzentrik.

Volume 8 of the Bauhaus Books series, Painting Photography Film, which was solely written by Moholy-Nagy, includes hers the scenario for the film, “Dynamik der Großstadt.”

Writes a film script, “Huhn bleibt Huhn”, 1925-30.



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