Although today almost forgotten Henny Cahn belongs to a small group of Dutch designers who in the thirties were strongly under the influence from Bauhaus, De Stijl and De Nieuwe Zakelijheid. Piet Zwart and Paul Schuitema became the most famous but Gerard Kiljan and his student Henny Cahn were by no means any less talented. Cahn fled Holland during the war and when he came back afterwards he disregarded functionalism and although he continued to do graphic design he principally became an inventor of appliances for the handicapped.This small publication, an issue of the irregular periodical 'Uitgelezen Boeken' made by the famous, small, Dutch, publisher De Buitenkant, is the first such attempt to illustrate the life and work of this 'forgotten' designer.
...a photoBook is an autonomous art form, comparable with a piece of sculpture, a play or a film. The photographs lose their own photographic character as things 'in themselves' and become parts, translated into printing ink, of a dramatic event called a book... - Dutch photography critic Ralph Prins
woensdag 1 april 2009
Henny Cahn Graphic Design Bauhaus De Stijl De Nieuwe Zakelijkheid Photography
Although today almost forgotten Henny Cahn belongs to a small group of Dutch designers who in the thirties were strongly under the influence from Bauhaus, De Stijl and De Nieuwe Zakelijheid. Piet Zwart and Paul Schuitema became the most famous but Gerard Kiljan and his student Henny Cahn were by no means any less talented. Cahn fled Holland during the war and when he came back afterwards he disregarded functionalism and although he continued to do graphic design he principally became an inventor of appliances for the handicapped.This small publication, an issue of the irregular periodical 'Uitgelezen Boeken' made by the famous, small, Dutch, publisher De Buitenkant, is the first such attempt to illustrate the life and work of this 'forgotten' designer.
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