Fritz Kahn

In the 1920’a Fritz Kahn released a series of books depicting the human body using industrial metaphors: switchboards, assembly lines, conveyor belts, projectors, machinery, workers, etc.

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His modernist style made use of the growing popular fervor over industrial development, and his exploration of the anatomical relationship to man-made structures is intriguing.

Here we have the nervous system visually compared to an electronic signaling system with the brain as an office where messages are sorted.

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I feel very lucky to know a few people who will attend (or would be willing to attend, if distance permitted) the Iconography of the Industrial Body lecture tonight, which will cover some of Kahn’s work.

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Body as Machines gallery.

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3 responses to “Fritz Kahn”

  1. Wow, great finds. I love the little pictures of the German scientists inside the mind. That is hilarious to me, very stereotypical. The non-accurate stuff is the best, I think. It’s really a glimpse into how people misunderstood biology in the past and reveals a lot.

  2. Find more Kahn images in the first monograph on his fascinating life and inspiring work: “Fritz Kahn – Man Machine” (English/German, 208 pages, 260 images, publisher SpringerWienNewYork).

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