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CUSTOM PRINT

Fotogramm of light circle showing spherical structure

From £15

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    24 x 30 cm
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Overview
  • 1.5 cm black stained ash box frame - stained and waxed
  • semi-gloss 250gsm premium lustre photo satin paper
  • cm white mount - acid free, extra thick smooth white mount board with a white core
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From £15
Fotogramm, photo Lazslo Moholy Nagy (1894-1946). Germany. This is the first print of the third portfolio: Fotogramme 1922-1926.  Dark ground with a light circle showing segments and concentric circles, as if of a spherical structure, towards top right. Photograms are photographs made without a camera or lens. They are made by placing objects on top of a piece of  photographic paper and then exposing the composition to light. Although this is a simple technique, as old as photography  itself, Moholy-Nagy revived it and applied it to modern forms of abstraction in art and graphic design.

Delivery

 

Our standard delivery charges and estimated timescales are as follows. Selected product exceptions apply; see product details. International deliveries may also be subject to customs fees or taxes upon arrival, which are your responsibility.

Standard delivery per order
UK
£5 – or FREE for orders over £60
3-6 working days
Europe
£20
6-10 working days
Rest of World
£30
10-14 working days

Custom prints

 

Each print is made to order and dispatched separately to other V&A Shop products, for UK delivery only. The charges and estimated timescales below are in addition to our standard delivery charge when bought together with a V&A Shop product. However, delivery is free for all orders over £60.

Custom print delivery (UK only)
Unframed
£9 per order – or FREE for orders over £60
6-10 working days
Framed
£15 per print – or FREE for orders over £60
6-10 working days

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About the artist

Laszlo Moholy-Nagy

A sculptor, photographer, film maker and graphic designer, László Moholy-Nagy experimented with many different artistic genres. He was one of the most prominent Modernist theorists and gained a reputation on both sides of the Atlantic as a teacher and writer. Born in Hungary, he served in the First World War as a young man before participating in the country’s radical political and artistic movements. At the age of 24 he moved to Germany, involving himself in Berlin’s Dada and Constructivist avant-garde, and later joining the Bauhaus where he was an important figure for much of the 1920s. It was here that he earned an international standing, writing alongside Walter Gropius as well as producing his own work. By the mid 1930s the rise of Nazis forced him to leave the freelance design practice he had established in Germany. He then worked in Amsterdam and London before moving to America to head the New Bauhaus in Chicago in 1937. He died in Chicago in 1946, having become a US citizen.