Fine Art Poster
Iconic artworks with vivid colors using giclée fine art 12-color printing technology. Unmatched quality and durability using 200gsm smooth matte paper. Unframed; delivered flat or rolled.




This gelatin silver print photomontage by Laszlo Moholy-Nagy features a collage of photographic elements arranged in a constructed space. The monochromatic palette enhances the stark, dreamlike quality of the image.
Laszlo Moholy-Nagy (1895-1946) was a Hungarian painter and photographer as well as a professor in the Bauhaus school. He was highly influential in the development of both abstract art and photography. He argued for the integration of technology and industry into the arts. Moholy-Nagy experimented with a range of media, including painting, sculpture, film, and photography, often combining them in innovative ways. His work often explored the interplay of light, space, and movement. 'The Broken Marriage' is a gelatin silver print photomontage. The composition features a collage of photographic elements arranged in a constructed space. A figure with a headdress of cylindrical forms dominates the centre, while a disembodied hand reaches in from the side. The background is constructed from geometric planes and architectural elements, creating a sense of depth and spatial ambiguity. The monochromatic palette enhances the stark, dreamlike quality of the image.

Solid wood frames, UV-protected acrylic glaze, and archival backing for lasting durability.
12-colour giclée printing on FSC-certified 200gsm fine art paper, with lifetime fade resistance.
Sustainably sourced materials, precision manufactured locally, reducing carbon footprint.
Each frame is sealed with rigid backing and fixings attached, no extra effort required.
Real reviews from real customers
Moholy-Nagy was born Laszlo Weisz in 1895. His father left the family; a family friend named Nagy helped raise the children, and Laszlo took the name. His cousin was the conductor Georg Solti. None of these facts appear in most accounts of his career, which tend to begin at the Bauhaus as though he materialised fully formed in Weimar in 1923. He studied law in Budapest and served in the First World War, where he was wounded and began drawing during his recovery. After the war he moved to Berlin and was invited by Walter Gropius to head the Bauhaus metal workshop at twenty-eight. He was not a metalworker. He was barely a painter. What he was, by then, was someone who understood that art, technology and education were the same problem. His wife Lucia introduced him to photograms: images made by placing objects directly on light-sensitive paper without a camera. He became obsessed with light as a material. He built kinetic sculptures he called Light-Space Modulators: motorised devices that projected moving shadows and reflections onto gallery walls. He was the first artist to suggest using telescopes, microscopes and x-rays as art tools. After the Nazis closed the Bauhaus, he fled to Amsterdam, then London, then Chicago, where in 1937 he founded the New Bauhaus. It became the Institute of Design at the Illinois Institute of Technology, the first American school built on Bauhaus principles. He ran it until his death from leukaemia in 1946, at fifty-one. His ashes are in Graceland Cemetery in Chicago, a city he adopted and which adopted him back.
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