Objects in Exile

Regular price €67.99
1930-1960
20th century art
A01=Robin Schuldenfrei
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Age Group_Uncategorized
Anni Albers
Author_Robin Schuldenfrei
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Category1=Non-Fiction
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Category=AGA
Category=AK
Category=AKX
Category=AMX
COP=United States
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design history
displacement
display history
eq_art-fashion-photography
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exile
graphic design
Herbert Bayer
Josef Albers
LA!szlA3 Moholy-Nagy
Language_English
Lucia Moholy
Ludwig Hilberseimer
László Moholy-Nagy
Marcel Breuer
Mies van der Rohe
modern architecture
modern art
modernism
Objects in Exile: Materiality between Europe and America
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pedagogy
photography
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princeton university press
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Robin Schuldenfrei
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Walter Gropius

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691232669
  • Dimensions: 191 x 267mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Jan 2024
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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An essential examination of how emigration and resettlement defined modernism

In the fraught years leading up to World War II, many modern artists and architects emigrated from continental Europe to the United States and Britain. The experience of exile infused their modernist ideas with new urgency and forced them to use certain materials in place of others, modify existing works, and reconsider their approach to design itself. In Objects in Exile, Robin Schuldenfrei reveals how the process of migration was crucial to the development of modernism, charting how modern art and architecture was shaped by the need to constantly face—and transcend—the materiality of things.

Taking readers from the prewar era to the 1960s, Schuldenfrei explores the objects these émigrés brought with them, what they left behind, and the new works they completed in exile. She argues that modernism could only coalesce with the abandonment of national borders in a process of emigration and resettlement, and brings to life the vibrant postwar period when avant-garde ideas came together and emerged as mainstream modernism. Examining works by Walter Gropius, László Moholy-Nagy, Lucia Moholy, Herbert Bayer, Anni and Josef Albers, and others, Schuldenfrei demonstrates the social impact of art objects produced in exile.

Shedding critical light on how the pressures of dislocation irrevocably altered the course of modernism, Objects in Exile shows how artists and designers, forced into exile by circumstances beyond their control, changed in unexpected ways to meet the needs and contexts of an uncertain world.

Robin Schuldenfrei is the Tangen Reader in 20th-Century Modernism at the Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London. Her books include Luxury and Modernism: Architecture and the Object in Germany, 1900–1933 (Princeton), Iteration: Episodes in the Mediation of Art and Architecture, and Atomic Dwelling: Anxiety, Domesticity, and Postwar Architecture.