Lyonel Feininger, Photographer

<i>Untitled</i> (Night View of Trees and Streetlamp, Burgkühnauer Allee, Dessau), 1928
<i>Bauhaus,</i> March 26, 1929
<i> Untitled</i> (Second Avenue El from Window of 235 East 22nd Street, New York), 1939
<i>Drunk with Beauty,</i> 1932
<i>Untitled</i> (Lux Feininger, Deep an der Rega), 1932
<i>Untitled</i> (Street Scene, Double Exposure, Halle), 1929–30
<i>Untitled</i> (Trees and Shadows, Burgkühnauer Allee, Dessau), April 1, 1929
Halle Market with the Church of St. Mary and the Red Tower, 1929–30
“Negative=Positive,” August 14, 1954
<i>Untitled</i> (Beach Scene), July 17, 1911
<i>Big News!,</i> January 1, 1909
“Feux Follets,” 1940
<i>Bicycle Race,</i> 1912
<i>Untitled</i> (Four Figures), 1935
<i>Untitled</i> (Ribnitz), November 1937
<i>Untitled </i> (Block Houses, Grey), January 1, 1955

[extra:Extra] See above for additional examples of Feininger’s work.

American-born Lyonel Feininger (1871-1956) was an illustrator and cartoonist active in Germany who in 1907 gave up his commercial work and rose to prominence as an artist who exhibited with the expressionists. Much of his formal work was heavily influenced by cubism, to which he was exposed in Paris in 1911. His resulting “prismatic” style was applied most frequently to architectural subjects—in 1919, Walter Gropius chose Feininger as his first appointment to the teaching staff of the Weimar Bauhaus—but also to figures and seascapes. Though best known for his drawings and watercolors, Feininger took up photography at the age of 57, going out at night to experiment with avant-garde photographic techniques. A selection of his rarely seen photographs, along with drawings and watercolors, will be on display from March 30 to June 2 at the Sackler Museum, and an online collection of his photographic works is accessible at www.harvardartmuseums.org/feiningerphotographs.

You might also like

Harvard Students form Pro-Palestine Encampment

Protesters set up camp in Harvard Yard.

Artificial Intelligence in the Academy

Harvard symposium assesses the new technology.

How Does Hate Spread?

Harvard symposium probes antisemitic, Islamophobic sentiments

Most popular

Fall River: Phoenix Rising?

“A good place to be pleasantly surprised”

Sam Altman’s Vision for the Future

OpenAI CEO on progress, safety, and policy

Artificial Intelligence in the Academy

Harvard symposium assesses the new technology.

More to explore

How is Artificial Intelligence Being Taught at Harvard?

A new Harvard course on artificial intelligence teaches students how to use the tool responsibly.

The Evolution of Human Fathers

Exploring the evolutionary biology of human fathers as caretakers

Civil War American Writer and Abolitionist John Greenleaf Whittier

Homes of the poet and abolitionist, whose verses were said to have inspired Abraham Lincoln.