MoMA
Posts tagged ‘1913’
MoMA Celebrates 1913: Lois Weber and Phillips Smalley’s Suspense

MoMA’s celebration of the landmark year 1913 continues with the 13th in a series of videos highlighting important works from 1913 in the Museum’s collection.

MoMA Celebrates 1913: Constantin Brancusi’s Mlle Pogany

MoMA’s celebration of the landmark year 1913 continues with the 12th in a series of videos highlighting important works from 1913 in the Museum’s collection.

MoMA Celebrates 1913: Léon Bakst’s Costume design for the ballet The Firebird

MoMA’s celebration of the landmark year 1913 continues with the 11th in a series of videos highlighting important works from 1913 in the Museum’s collection.

May 6, 2013  |  1913 Centennial Celebration, Videos
MoMA Celebrates 1913: Pablo Picasso’s Glass, Guitar, and Bottle

MoMA’s celebration of the landmark year 1913 continues with the tenth in a series of videos highlighting important works from 1913 in the Museum’s collection.

MoMA Celebrates 1913: Giorgio de Chirico’s The Anxious Journey

MoMA’s celebration of the landmark year 1913 continues with the ninth in a series of videos highlighting important works from 1913 in the Museum’s collection.

MoMA Celebrates 1913: Vase by Louis Comfort Tiffany

MoMA’s celebration of the landmark year 1913 continues with the eighth in a series of videos highlighting important works from 1913 in the Museum’s collection.

MoMA Celebrates 1913: Olga Rozanova’s Utinoe gnezdyshko…durnykh slov (A Little Duck’s Nest…of Bad Words)


MoMA’s celebration of the landmark year 1913 continues with the seventh in a series of videos highlighting important works from 1913 in the Museum’s collection.

MoMA Celebrates 1913: Léopold Survage’s Colored Rhythm: Study for the Film

MoMA’s celebration of the landmark year 1913 continues with the sixth in a series of videos highlighting important works from 1913 in the Museum’s collection.

March 4, 2013  |  Learning and Engagement
Innovation and Collaboration in Inventing Abstraction and Beyond

Inventing Abstraction, 1910–1925, on view at MoMA through April 15, chronicles the early years of abstraction in Europe and the United States. At the core of the exhibition is the idea that abstraction was not the result of individual genius, but rather arose from and spread through an international network of artists hanging out, collaborating, and sharing ideas during the years before and after World War I.

MoMA Celebrates 1913: Emil Nolde’s Young Couple

 

MoMA’s celebration of the landmark year 1913 continues with the fifth in a series of videos highlighting important works from 1913 in the Museum’s collection.