Sibyl Moholy-Nagy: Moholy-Nagy – Experiment in Totality (1950–)
Filed under book | Tags: · architecture, art, art history, bauhaus, biography, constructivism, graphic design, history of architecture, painting, typography

“This biography of the Constructivist leader László Moholy-Nagy illustrates his struggle for a total approach to seeing-teaching-creating. Written by Sibyl Moholy-Nagy, László’s second wife and lifetime collaborator, she witnessed many of the defining moments of the Bauhaus movement and its migration to the United States and its continuation as the Chicago New Bauhaus and Institute of Design. An excellent first-person account.”
With an Introduction by Walter Gropius
Publisher Harper & Brothers, New York, 1950
262 pages
Second edition
Publisher MIT Press, 1969
xviii+259 pages
PDF (1950)
Internet Archive (1950, multiple formats)
PDF (2nd ed., 1969, added on 2020-1-3)
Jim Ellis: Derek Jarman’s Angelic Conversations (2009)
Filed under book | Tags: · activism, aesthetics, art, biography, film, politics, punk, situationists

Best known as an iconoclastic, wildly inventive filmmaker, Derek Jarman was also an accomplished author, painter, and landscape artist. In Derek Jarman’s Angelic Conversations, Jim Ellis considers Jarman’s wide-ranging oeuvre to present a broad perspective on the career and life of one of the most provocative, engaged, and important artists of the twentieth century.
Derek Jarman’s Angelic Conversations analyzes Jarman’s work—including his famous films Caravaggio, Jubilee, Edward II, Blue, and Sebastiane—in relation to his critiques of the government and his activism in the gay community, from the liberationist movement to the AIDS epidemic. While others have frequently focused on Jarman’s biography, Ellis looks at how his politics and aesthetics are intertwined to comprehend his most radical aspects, particularly in films such as War Requiem and The Last of England.
Here Jarman is revealed as an artist who keenly understood the role of history and mythology in creating a personal and national identity: as an activist, he sought to challenge old histories while producing new ones to carve out a space for alternative communities in Britain late in the twentieth century.
Publisher University of Minnesota Press, 2009
ISBN 0816653135, 9780816653133
312 pages
Franz Schulze: Mies van der Rohe: A Critical Biography (1985/1989) [Italian]
Filed under book | Tags: · architecture, bauhaus, biography, design

Schulze’s acclaimed biography is the first full treatment of the master German-American modern architect. Schulze traces Mies’s European career in its progression to avant-garde modernism—where his work was materially rich but of modest scale—to his second maturity and world renown in the United States, where he invented a new architectural language of “objective” structural expression. Among the authors’ most exciting new discoveries is the massive transcript of the early-1950s Farnsworth House court case, which discloses for the first time the facts about Mies’s epic battle with his client Edith Farnsworth. The book reveals new information about his relationships with women, including the nature and breakup of his marriage to the wealthy Ada Bruhn, his close professional and personal ties to the gifted designer Lilly Reich, and new details from a series of illuminating interviews with his American companion, Lora Marx. This edition also gives voice to dozens of architects who knew and worked with (and sometimes against) Mies—many of them from the unique oral history collection of the Art Institute of Chicago’s Department of Architecture.
This comprehensive biography tells the compelling story of how Mies and his students and followers created some of the most significant buildings of the twentieth century.
Originally published by University Of Chicago Press, in association with the Mies van der Rohe Archive of the Museum of Modern Art, 1985
Translated to Italian by Mara De Benedetti, published as Mies van der Rohe by Editorial Jaca Book spa, Milan, April 1989, ISBN 8816600888, 344 pages.
PDF (no OCR)
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