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Lászlo Moholy-Nagy : ウィキペディア英語版
László Moholy-Nagy

László Moholy-Nagy (;〔(Forvo.com )〕 July 20, 1895 – November 24, 1946) was a Hungarian painter and photographer as well as a professor in the Bauhaus school. He was highly influenced by constructivism and a strong advocate of the integration of technology and industry into the arts.
==Early life==
Moholy-Nagy was born László Weisz in Bácsborsód to a Jewish-Hungarian family.〔Chilvers, Ian & Glaves-Smith, John eds., ''Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Art '', Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009. pp. 471-472〕 His cousin was the conductor Sir Georg Solti. He attended Gymnasium (academic high school) in the city of Szeged. He changed his German-Jewish surname to the Magyar surname of his mother's Christian lawyer friend Nagy, who supported the family and helped raise Moholy-Nagy and his brothers when their Jewish father, Lipót Weisz left the family. Later, he added “Moholy” ("from Mohol") to his surname, after the name of the Hungarian town Mohol in which he grew up. One part of his boyhood was spent in a Hungarian Ada town, in the family home near Mohol. In 1918 he formally converted to the Hungarian Reformed Church (Calvinist); his godfather was his Roman Catholic university friend, the art critic Ivan Hevesy. Immediately before and during World War I he studied law in Budapest and served in the war, where he sustained a serious injury. In Budapest, on leave and during convalescence, Moholy-Nagy became involved first with the journal ''Jelenkor'' (“The Present Age”), edited by Hevesy, and then with the “Activist” circle around Lajos Kassák’s journal ''Ma'' (“Today”). After his discharge from the Austro-Hungarian army in October 1918, he attended the private art school of the Hungarian Fauve artist Róbert Berény. He was a supporter of the Hungarian Soviet Republic, declared early in 1919, though he assumed no official role in it. After the defeat of the Communist regime in August, he withdrew to Szeged. An exhibition of his work was held there, before he left for Vienna around November 1919. He left for Berlin early in 1920.

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