Skip to main content
00:00 / 00:00
Your browser does not support the audio element.
Visit
Join in
Discover
Research
Frau mit rotem Haar in orangefarbener Bluse, die nachdenklich an einem Tisch sitzt. Stifte und Papiere liegen vor ihr.About Bauhaus.
Der Podcast
Das Bauhaus-Archiv bekommt ein neues Zuhause
Deutsch
Frau mit rotem Haar in orangefarbener Bluse, die nachdenklich an einem Tisch sitzt. Stifte und Papiere liegen vor ihr.About Bauhaus.
Der Podcast
Das Bauhaus-Archiv bekommt ein neues Zuhause
Collection
Education & Outreach
Our New Building
Image service
Bauhaus-Shop
About us
Contact
ImprintPrivacy PolicyCode of ConductCookie setup
Back

Bauhaus-Worksheet #6: Intensified Vision

5/28/2025
1
min reading time
by Julia Marquardt

The artist and designer László Moholy-Nagy was a Bauhaus master from 1923 to 1928. In his 1947 book “Vision in Motion”, he described eight varieties of photographic vision: 1. abstract, 2. exact, 3. rapid, 4. slow, 5. intensified, 6. penetrating, 7. simultaneous and 8. distorted. Based on his fifth variant, you can experience intensified vision by taking photos of your object from different angles and distances.

  • You'll need:
    – a camera
    – objects with different surface textures
    – and colours

    1. Take a picture of your object. Then try other angles and image compositions.

    2. Move closer to the object – as close as you can get before it gets blurry – and take another picture.

    3. Place the photos of the same object together and discover how the object and material change in appearance from different distances. Share your results with us at #MyBauhausLab.

    Idea und Concept: Julia Marquardt


Bauhaus-Worksheet #6:
Intensified Vision

Download Instructions
Subscribe the newsletter
  • Deutsch
  • About Bauhaus.
    The Podcast
  • A New House for the Bauhaus
  • About us
  • Our history
  • Contact