Gyula Ernyey


Gyula Ernyey is a distinguished Hungarian interior designer and historian of art and design. He is recognized as a founding figure in Hungarian design history research. Ernyey is Professor Emeritus at the Moholy-Nagy University of Art and Design and holds the title of Doctor of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

Academic career

He graduated in 1965 from the Department of Interior Design at the Hungarian University of Craft and Design as a student of architect György Szrogh. His research career was initiated by Professor Frigyes Pogány. In 1973, he earned a Doctorate in Engineering title at the Institute of Architectural History and Theory at the Budapest University of Technology, and in 1981 he obtained the Candidate of Art History degree, and in 2015 he was awarded the title of Doctor of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
From 1967, he served as a university lecturer at the at the Hungarian University of Craft and Design, today's Moholy-Nagy University of Art and Design; initially as an assistant lecturer, then as an adjunct and associate professor, and finally from 1993 as a full professor. He has been Professor Emeritus since 2011.
From 1965 to 1967, he was the industrial design consultant at the Secretariat of the Council of Applied Arts. From 1975 to 1988, he was deputy director general of the Museum of Applied Arts, from 1988 to 1992, he was scientific advisor to Rubik Studio, and from 1992 to 1993, he was deputy head of department at the National Committee for Technological Development Industrial Design and Ergonomics Council Office. From 1993 to 2004, he was the director of the Institute of Theory at the Hungarian University of Craft and Design, today the Moholy-Nagy University of Art and Design. From 2005 to 2011, he led the Program B in Theory of Applied Arts at the Doctoral School of the university, and from 2008 to 2010, he headed the Department of Design and Art History at the Institute of Theory, MOME.
As a designer he contributed to both domestic and international design exhibitions, including: Hungarian Art Nouveau traveling exhibition in the US, 1977–78; Éva Zeisel retrospective at the Museum of Applied Arts, 1988; Made in Hungary 1880–2010 Krakow, Warsaw, Riga, Tallinn, Vilnius, Prague, Timișoara, Bucharest, and Budapest 2010–2011). He is also the creator of series-produced plastic objects for the Miskolc Plastics Industry Company.
His research focuses on general and Hungarian design history and theory, with particular emphasis on the 20th century. His successful defense of the dissertation titled Design. Design Theory and Product Design 1750–2010 was the first doctoral defense in the field of design at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. In addition to his research and teaching activities, he has also contributed to academic administration, professional associations, and the editing of scholarly journals.

Professional public activities

  • Member of the Művészeti Alap and the Magyar Alkotóművészek Országos Egyesülete
  • Member of the Magyar Képzőművészek és Iparművészek Szövetsége
  • Founding member of the editorial board of the journal Ipari Forma
  • Member of the Artistic Board of Trustees of the Budapest Fővárosi Tanács, later Fővárosi Közgyűlés
  • Founding member of the Magyar Mérnökakadémia Board of Trustees deputy president of the Magyar Mérnökakadémia
  • Founding member of the editorial board of the journal Magyar Iparművészet
  • Member of the Master’s Degree and Art Theory Expert Committee of the Hungarian Accreditation Committee
  • Founding President of the Doctoral Council of the Magyar Iparművészeti Főiskola
  • Founding President of the Habilitation Committee of the Magyar Iparművészeti Főiskola
  • President of the Magyar Képzőművészek és Iparművészek Szövetsége
  • Delegate of the International Association of Art, IAA/AIAP
  • Vice-President for ''Foreign Affairs of the Magyar Képzőművészek és Iparművészek Szövetsége''

Books

Az ipari forma története Magyarországon. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1974. 86 p. Az ipari forma története. Budapest: Corvina Kiadó, 1983. 209. p. Made in Hungary: the Best of 150 Years in Industrial Design. Budapest: Rubik Innovation Found, 1993. 155. p. Tárgyvilágunk, 1896–1996: iparművészet-történeti és -elméleti vázlatok. Budapest; Pécs: Dialóg Campus Kiadó, 1998. 318 p. Britain and Hungary: Contacts in Architecture and Design during the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Essays and Studies. Budapest: Hungarian University of Craft and Design, 1999. 291. p.Design: tervezéselmélet és termékformálás, 1750–2000. Budapest; Pécs: Dialóg Campus Kiadó, 2000. 350. p. Britain and Hungary: Contacts in Architecture, Design, Art and Theory during the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Essays and Studies. Budapest: Hungarian University of Craft and Design, 2003. 292. p.Made in Hungary 1900–2000. Budapest: Magyar Képzőművészek és Iparművészek Szövetsége, 2005. 80. p.Britain and Hungary: Contacts in Architecture, Design, Art and Theory during the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Essays and Studies. Vol. 3. Budapest: Hungarian University of Craft and Design, 2005.Breuer Marcell: elvek és eredmények: Marcel Breuer: principles and results. Pécs: Pro Pannonia Kiadó, 2008. 174. p. Muchától Rubikig: Magyarország és Kelet-Közép-Európa 20. századi designtörténetéből: From Mucha to Rubik: highlights in the 20th century history of East-Central European design. Budapest: Ráday Könyvesház, 2010. 503 p. Design: tervezéselmélet és termékformálás, 1750–2010. Budapest: Ráday Könyvesház, 2011. 392. p. Bozzay Dezső és pályatársai 1912–1974: Ipari művészet és modernizáció Magyarországon. Budapest: FUGA, 2016. 243. p. Iparművészet és design: Adalékok és építőelemek az Iparművészeti Múzeum design-gyűjteményéhez. Budapest: Iparművészeti Múzeum, 2022. 300.p. Tárgyaink az időben: Tűnődések tárgykultúránkról, Budapest: MOME, 2023. 496. p.

Awards

  • Apáczai Csere János-díj
  • Szent-Györgyi Albert-díj
  • A Magyar Köztársasági Érdemrend tisztikeresztje
  • Dózsa-Farkas András-díj
  • Ladislav Sutnar-díj