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  1. Sibyl Moholy-Nagy (nacida Dorothea Maria Pauline Alice Sybille Pietzsch [1] Dresde, 29 de octubre de 1903-Nueva York, 8 de enero de 1971) fue una historiadora de la arquitectura y el arte alemana.

  2. Sibyl Moholy-Nagy (born Dorothea Maria Pauline Alice Sybille Pietzsch; October 29, 1903 – January 8, 1971) was an architectural and art historian. Originally a German citizen, she accompanied her second husband, the Hungarian Bauhaus artist László Moholy-Nagy, in his move to the United States.

  3. 1 de jun. de 2019 · Sibyl Moholy-Nagy’s intelligence, style, commitment, and courage made architects and the general public pay attention to her words, especially when she freely criticized the postwar work of her husband’s former colleagues at the Bauhaus, notably Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer.

  4. Architecture Research Office. By Hilde Heynen, University of Leuven, Belgium. Sibyl Moholy-Nagy (1903–1971) was an architectural historian, critic, and teacher, who played an important role in the reassessment of modern architecture after World War II.

  5. Sibylle Pietzsch, later known as Sibyl Moholy-Nagy, was born in Dresden, Germany, in 1903 and died in New York in 1971. She was a gifted writer, eventually in two languages, and in later life became a professor of architectural history.

  6. Sibyl Moholy-Nagy: Architecture, Modernism. and Its Discontents. By Hilde Heynen. London: Bloomsbury. Studies in Modern Architecture, 2019. 234 mm x 156 mm. 288 pages. US$ 100.00 (hardback), US$ 31.46 (paperback) ISBN: 978-1-350094-11-6.

  7. Vernacular Architecture and the Uses of the Past. Hilde Heynen. In sending out the manuscript of Native Genius in Anonymous Architecture to a publisher, Sibyl Moholy-Nagy added a note on the “Genesis of the manuscript,” which is quite revealing about the intellectual trajectory that gave rise to it.