Event detail
Cold War Modern
25. Sep - 10. Jan 09 / ended Victoria and Albert MuseumDaily 10:00-17:35, (last ticket sold 16:45, last entry 17:00) Fridays 10:00-21:50 (last ticket sold 20:45, last entry 21:00) Closed 24 – 25 December
Garden Egg Chair, Peter Ghyczy (born 1940), Germany, 1968
Cold War Modern Design 1945-70
The decades after the Second World War saw an intense rivalry between the world’s two superpowers: the Soviet Union and America. In the ‘cold war’ that ensued, the two powers engaged in aggressive contests to build their own spheres of influence. They accelerated the development of new technologies to produce weapons, launched ambitious space programmes and waged propaganda campaigns across the world.
Vying to outdo one another, each deployed displays of modern living, signs of progress and images of future utopias. Art, architecture and design were drawn into this Cold War competition to demonstrate a superior vision of modernity.
Modern life after 1945 seemed to promise both utopia and catastrophe. By 1949, both of the world’s superpowers had acquired the capacity to annihilate one another with nuclear weapons. Twenty years later, man had walked on the moon.
Modernist artists and designers responded to this dual vision, searching for ways to build a new and hopeful future and deal with the anxieties of the present.
This exhibition explores modern art, architecture, design and film in the period 1945-70, highlighting the ways in which artists and designers responded to the conditions of the Cold War.
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by oilyragandturps 05.11.08 19:25
Contextualises intelligently and in a visually exciting way the political, propogandist, design, fashion, art and film influences/reactions to the cold war/space race era - I popped in for an hour and stayed for three making notes like crazy! Corbusier's film is haunting...
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