The artwork “Hidak Bridges,” created by Laszlo Moholy-Nagy in 1921, is a cityscape belonging to the Dada art movement.
The composition features an abstract arrangement of geometric shapes, lines, and letters, characteristic of the Dada movement’s embrace of nonsensical and contradictory elements. The artwork includes various structural forms suggestive of bridges, alongside textual elements such as numbers and letters. The use of contrasting colors and the interplay between light and dark sections create a dynamic sense of movement and complexity. The design conveys a modernist aesthetic that challenges traditional artistic conventions, exemplifying Moholy-Nagy’s innovative approach to visual expression during the early 20th century.