The exhibition Contemporary Danish Design arrived in Moscow in December 1969, when Danish design was undergoing a crisis. The popularity of “Danish Modern,” the notion centered on excellent artisanship, natural materials, and a balance between tradition and modernity, was diminishing due to shifting tastes in home furnishing and consumer society critiques. This article considers the Moscow exhibition as a twin effort to include design in Danish- Soviet cultural diplomacy and to revive the cultural importance of Danish Modern in the era of waning techno-optimism and student protests
The text is dedicated to the issue of material imprints of the culture and the current state of the ...
Exhibition review: “Nordic Design: The Response to the Bauhaus”. Bröhan-Museum, Berlin, 24 October 2...
A significant body of mid-century design has remained relatively unstudied and underrepresented in m...
The exhibition Contemporary Danish Design arrived in Moscow in December 1969, when Danish design was...
The article presents the research project “Exhibiting across the Iron Curtain: The forgot-ten trail ...
The article examines how the Danish artists of the group Cobra appeared in front of exhibitions orga...
Covering the 1960s and 1970s, this volume explores new ways of investigating, comparing and interpre...
The article will by emphasizing a transnational and geopolitical approach, investigate eight exhibit...
Denmark's strategic geographical position between Continental Europe and Scandinavian region makes t...
This article investigates exhibitions of Baltic contemporary art in the Early 1990s, that were direc...
The article contributes to a revision of today’s understanding of the 1950s Danish art scene. By pre...
This thesis investigates the reception and influence of Scandinavian design in Australia from 1950 t...
This article examines two exhibitions introducing international surrealism in the North: Paris 1932 ...
Previously in the University eprints HAIRST pilot service at http://eprints.st-andrews.ac.uk/archive...
At Trapholt, Museum of Modern Art and Design in Kolding, Denmark, research focus and museum activiti...
The text is dedicated to the issue of material imprints of the culture and the current state of the ...
Exhibition review: “Nordic Design: The Response to the Bauhaus”. Bröhan-Museum, Berlin, 24 October 2...
A significant body of mid-century design has remained relatively unstudied and underrepresented in m...
The exhibition Contemporary Danish Design arrived in Moscow in December 1969, when Danish design was...
The article presents the research project “Exhibiting across the Iron Curtain: The forgot-ten trail ...
The article examines how the Danish artists of the group Cobra appeared in front of exhibitions orga...
Covering the 1960s and 1970s, this volume explores new ways of investigating, comparing and interpre...
The article will by emphasizing a transnational and geopolitical approach, investigate eight exhibit...
Denmark's strategic geographical position between Continental Europe and Scandinavian region makes t...
This article investigates exhibitions of Baltic contemporary art in the Early 1990s, that were direc...
The article contributes to a revision of today’s understanding of the 1950s Danish art scene. By pre...
This thesis investigates the reception and influence of Scandinavian design in Australia from 1950 t...
This article examines two exhibitions introducing international surrealism in the North: Paris 1932 ...
Previously in the University eprints HAIRST pilot service at http://eprints.st-andrews.ac.uk/archive...
At Trapholt, Museum of Modern Art and Design in Kolding, Denmark, research focus and museum activiti...
The text is dedicated to the issue of material imprints of the culture and the current state of the ...
Exhibition review: “Nordic Design: The Response to the Bauhaus”. Bröhan-Museum, Berlin, 24 October 2...
A significant body of mid-century design has remained relatively unstudied and underrepresented in m...