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Bauhaus Isometric Grid 1919

Sale price£20.00 Regular price£25.00
Product: Fine Art Poster
Size: A4 (21x29.7 cm)
Frame: -
Available in stock
📦 Delivery 2–5 days

A striking display of Bauhaus precision, this 1919 print features a tessellated isometric cube grid rendered in black lines on a soft cream field. The optical effect is both mesmerizing and grounding, echoing themes of structure, modularity, and order.


This design is perfect for lovers of architectural geometry and minimalist pattern. It lends itself to a variety of interiors, particularly those that embrace mid-century modern or Scandinavian design influences, with a Bauhaus twist.

What our customers say

Real reviews from real customers

Received the beautiful hummingbird print in black frame. Great service, stunning print, I will post a picture when the room is finished. Thank you
Jayne - Yorkshire
Delighted with this print! The colours are extremely vibrant, the imagine crystal clear and beautifully displayed in an attractive frame. Delivery was prompt and securely packaged. Highly recommended and will be using again!
Matt - Rutland
So pleased with my print and the frame it’s housed in. Fantastic quality and really adds character to the room. Communication was great and it was delivered quicker than estimated. Overall I’m extremely pleased and will recommend to friends. I’m already eying up my next purchase!
Nikki - London
Beautiful print, great quality and love it with the white frame. Delivery was really fast. I've had loads of compliments from visitors as I've hung it in my hallway as the first thing you see when you enter the house. Couldn't be happier.
Alice - Norfolk
Bauhaus

Bauhaus

The Bauhaus was founded in 1919 by architect Walter Gropius in Weimar, Germany, and quickly became one of the most influential art and design schools of the 20th century. Born in the aftermath of World War I, the movement sought to unify art, craft, and technology under a single creative vision. At its core, Bauhaus rejected ornate decoration in favour of functionality, simplicity, and geometric clarity—an ethos that would go on to shape modern architecture, industrial design, and graphic arts across the globe. The school moved from Weimar to Dessau in 1925 and later to Berlin before being shut down by the Nazis in 1933.

The Bauhaus was home to some of the most pioneering artists, designers, and architects of its time. Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky, Josef Albers, László Moholy-Nagy, and Marianne Brandt were just a few of the luminaries who taught or studied at the institution. Each brought their own discipline and aesthetic—ranging from colour theory and abstraction to photography and industrial design—yet shared a commitment to exploring how creativity could enhance everyday life. Their teachings and experiments laid the foundation for movements such as modernism, minimalism, and the International Style.

Bauhaus design drew inspiration from Constructivism, De Stijl, and the Arts and Crafts movement, but it established a unique visual language centred on clean lines, functional form, and innovative material use. Furniture, typography, textiles, and architecture from this era remain iconic to this day. The Bauhaus legacy lives on through its continued influence on design education, contemporary aesthetics, and the principles of good design: clarity, purpose, and elegance through restraint.
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