Oct 05, 2023 - Sale 2647

Sale 2647 - Lot 107

Price Realized: $ 688
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 1,000 - $ 1,500
LASZLO MOHOLY-NAGY (1895-1946)
Untitled (World's Fair, New York). Fujicolor crystal archive chromogenic print, the image measuring 13 1/2x9 inches (34.3x22.9 cm.), the sheet 14x11 inches (35.6x27.9 cm.), with a "Nachlass Moholy-Nagy" blind stamp on recto, and Hattula Moholy-Nagy's signature, the edition notation 3 of 10, and an inventory number in pencil, on verso. 1939; printed circa 2002

Provenance: Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York, 2002; to the Estate of Pierre Apraxine, New York

This work was produced on the occasion of the exhibition László Moholy-Nagy devoted to his color photographs at Andrea Rosen Gallery, October 19 – November 23, 2002.

Born in Estonia as a member of an exiled noble Russian family and educated in Belgium, Pierre Apraxine came to the United States in 1970 as a Fulbright Scholar to work at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. He was educated in classical draftsmanship and was largely self-taught as a student of photography. From 1976 to 2007 Mr. Apraxine was the art curator for the Gilman Paper Company headed by the late Howard Gilman. There he assembled several collections of contemporary paintings and sculptures, visionary architectural drawings (now at the Museum of Modern Art), and photographs.

The photography was acquired as the market was forming, a time of heady newness and excitement. The more than 8,500 works in the collection came to tell the history of the medium as well as the history of industrialization and modernization, a remarkable alchemy of timing and a unique way of looking that remains unparalleled.

In 1993 the collection of photographs was shown at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in a landmark exhibition: "The Waking Dream: Photography's First Century" (the museum then acquired the collection in 2005). In 1994 he was the recipient with Maria Morris Hambourg of the International Center of Photography Writing Award for the catalogue.

Apraxine curated several exhibitions at the Metropolitan Museum, authored additional important titles, and was the curator in charge of the installation of Gustave Le Gray at the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Paris.