The “Playboy Architecture 1953 – 1979” exhibition at the Deutsches Architekturmuseum considers the early American Playboy a promoter of modern architecture. We have illuminated the exhibition in diverse ways – and reflect on our own cooperation with the Playboy.
Shown in Germany for the first time after The Hague and Rotterdam, the exhibition in Frankfurt presents a piece a media history in a new light as it focuses on the architectures and interiors of the men’s magazine. The exhibition centres on the “Archive”, which allows visitors to browse through issues dating between 1953 and 1979. Featuring a broad spectrum of topics involving art and culture, the early Playboy puts itself across as a lifestyle medium for a cultured audience – only with playmates gracing the architectures designed by Buckminster Fuller or John Lautner and armchairs by Eero Saarinen or the Eames.
The copied ensembles of the photo settings in different exhibition zones are presented to the visitor as architectural models and furniture arrangements, flanked by oversized magazine pages on the walls, contemporary film documents and background music. Even the bed in which Hugh Hefner gave interviews is on display. As an attention-grabber, the delicate topic is nicely contrasted by a sober exhibition design with plain wooden shelving.