It will bring together over 300 exhibits from a Sputnik and an Apollo Mission space suit to films by Stanley Kubrick, paintings by Robert Rauschenberg and Gerhard Richter, fashion by Paco Rabanne, designs by Charles and Ray Eames and Dieter Rams, architecture by Le Corbusier, Richard Buckminster Fuller and Archigram, and vehicles including a Messerschmidt micro-car.
The period after the Second World War was one of anxiety and tension but also one of great optimism and unprecedented technological development. The exhibition will examine how design was shaped by the Cold War period against the backdrop of the battle between communism and capitalism, the advances of the space race, and the international competition to be modern.
Concentrating on the years from 1945 to 1970, the exhibition will display objects from around the world including the USA, the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Italy, France, East and West Germany, Cuba and the UK.
Highlights will include:
- Classic Eames designs made of ‘modern’ materials such as fibreglass;
- Furniture inspired by space such as Eero Aarnio’s Globe Chair and the Garden Egg Chair by Peter Ghyczy;
- Dieter Ram’s designs for Braun including his T1000 Radio world receiver;
- Previously unseen Eastern bloc architecture, furniture, textiles, graphics and glass;
- Futuristic fashion by designers including Paco Rabanne and Pierre Cardin;
- New post-war forms of transport including the P70 Coupe (an early version of the plastic Trabant), the micro car Messerschmitt Kabinenroller and the Vespa motorscooter;
- Films which shaped the popular imagination such as Goldfinger, The Ipcress File, Dr. Strangelove and 2001: A Space Odyssey as well as original set design drawings by Kenneth Adam;
- Works by Pablo Picasso, Richard Hamilton, Gerhard Richter, Lucio Fontana and Robert Rauschenberg illustrating the way artists responded to the dominant political and social ideas of the time;
- Propaganda and anti-nuclear posters, photography and sculpture from both East and West;
- Imagined futuristic architecture schemes for cities and dwellings by Hans Hollein, Archigram and Superstudio;
- Experimental designs for inflatable buildings, including a full-scale reconstruction of a key work by Haus-Rucker-Co.
Mark Jones, Director of the V&A, said: “This is the first exhibition to explore how the development of Modernism after 1945 was shaped by the Cold War. It was a tremendously exciting period in the history of design, a period we have defined as Cold War Modern”.
The exhibition will start in the immediate post-war period showing differing visions for rebuilding devastated cities and competing ideas of modern life. It will look at new industrial products and building methods from the West as well as socialist realist art and architecture from the USSR. It will focus on rival architectural visions in East and West Berlin: the monumental ‘Stalinallee’ in the Eastern Sector, and the Modernist housing schemes of ‘Interbau’ in the West designed by architects including Le Corbusier, Walter Gropius and Oskar Niemeyer.
Cold War Modern will examine how the competition to be modern entered the domestic sphere, exemplified by the famous 1959 ‘Kitchen Debate’ between Nixon and Khrushchev which took place at the American National Exhibition staged in Moscow, amid displays of the latest American household goods.
During this period, images of destruction haunted the collective imagination. The nuclear threat, and the response to it, will be seen through graphics, art, film and imaginary schemes such as Buckminster Fuller’s 1962 geodesic Dome over Manhattan.
A section on the space race and hi-tech triumphs will highlight the first space mission by Yuri Gagarin aboard a Vostok space capsule. On display will be designs of interiors for NASA space craft by Raymond Loewy, experimental spacesuits as well as many examples of furniture, architecture, art and fashion inspired by the space race. Amongst the many technological achievements of the period, a new and distinctive form of architecture emerged, the telecommunications tower, including the Post Office Tower in London and Moscow’s Ostankino Tower.
Under the theme of ‘Revolution’, the exhibition will consider forms of protest and rebellion, including the tumultuous events of 1968 in Paris and Prague, looking at them through posters, film, photography and art.
The final section will look at how Cold War technologies were used by architects and designers to create imagined utopias, a world of inflatable, mobile and expendable habitats by groups such as Superstudio and Archigram. There will be a full scale reconstruction of Oasis No. 7, a giant inflatable environment containing a small ‘beach’ with palm tree, designed by Viennese architects Haus-Rucker-Co. It will also display other critical views of the future such as Arata Isozaki’s photomontage Re-Ruined Hiroshima.
The exhibition will end with the first photographs of Earth taken from space, which inspired artists and designers in their utopian imaginings and acted as a catalyst to a new environmental awareness of the fragility of the planet. -- www.vam.ac.uk