Lucia Moholy, la photographe du Bauhaus
Lucia Moholy, la photographe du Bauhaus

Lucia Moholy, la photographe du Bauhaus

February 10, 2025 | 0 min

As a Bauhaus photographer, Lucia Moholy (1894-1989) was a pioneer of New Objectivity. Her husband László Moholy-Nagy was appointed to the Bauhaus in 1923. They worked there together and László became famous as the inventor of the photogram, a photo without film. Lucia's contribution to this only became known later. When the Czech-born Jew was forced to leave Germany in 1933 after the Nazis seized power, she was unable to take her most important possession, her glass negatives, with her. She struggled to keep her head above water in London and worked for the British secret service on the microfilming of valuable documents. With her vision of microfilm as freely accessible information for all, she is now regarded as a pioneer of the Internet. After the war, Lucia set out in search of her glass negatives.

Genres

Documentary

Cast

Naomi Scott

Susanne Schäfer

Naomi Scott

Heinzl Spagl

Naomi Scott

Tjadke Biallowons

Naomi Scott

Eli Riccardi

Naomi Scott

Peter Haug-Lammersdorf

Share on social media

More Like This

White Mountains
Three Arts in Antarctica
Women & the Wind
Born in Auschwitz
Space Station 3D
Dance With Me
Tiananmen: Forbidden Memory
The Yes Men Fix the World
9/11
La coda di una Balena
Me, Myself & Martin Laursen
Centrales nucléaire : démantèlement impossible
More Than Monogamy
14-18, les tunnels de guerre
My Journey Through French Cinema
Chuck Norris's Epic Guide to Military Vehicles
Women in Christ
Scarlet Girls
Grand Canyon Adventure: River at Risk
Leviathan