
Bauhaus Musik Vinyl by Retrodrome
A vinyl record becomes a vehicle for pure Bauhaus geometry — concentric circles, radial lines, and typographic lettering arranged with the rigorous logic of a workshop poster. Retrodrome channels the spirit of early-twentieth-century graphic design, where form followed function and every element earned its place on the page. The limited palette — likely drawn from the movement's own preference for primaries and neutrals — keeps the composition taut and energetic. Music and modernism were never far apart in Weimar Germany, and this piece captures that kinship with knowing precision.
This canvas print is made in Kuriosis's Berlin studio, a fitting origin for a work so rooted in German design history. The woven surface adds depth and texture to the bold geometric forms, bringing a tactile quality that amplifies the work's graphic confidence.
Original: $44.15
-65%$44.15
$15.45More Images






Bauhaus Musik Vinyl by Retrodrome
A vinyl record becomes a vehicle for pure Bauhaus geometry — concentric circles, radial lines, and typographic lettering arranged with the rigorous logic of a workshop poster. Retrodrome channels the spirit of early-twentieth-century graphic design, where form followed function and every element earned its place on the page. The limited palette — likely drawn from the movement's own preference for primaries and neutrals — keeps the composition taut and energetic. Music and modernism were never far apart in Weimar Germany, and this piece captures that kinship with knowing precision.
This canvas print is made in Kuriosis's Berlin studio, a fitting origin for a work so rooted in German design history. The woven surface adds depth and texture to the bold geometric forms, bringing a tactile quality that amplifies the work's graphic confidence.
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Description
A vinyl record becomes a vehicle for pure Bauhaus geometry — concentric circles, radial lines, and typographic lettering arranged with the rigorous logic of a workshop poster. Retrodrome channels the spirit of early-twentieth-century graphic design, where form followed function and every element earned its place on the page. The limited palette — likely drawn from the movement's own preference for primaries and neutrals — keeps the composition taut and energetic. Music and modernism were never far apart in Weimar Germany, and this piece captures that kinship with knowing precision.
This canvas print is made in Kuriosis's Berlin studio, a fitting origin for a work so rooted in German design history. The woven surface adds depth and texture to the bold geometric forms, bringing a tactile quality that amplifies the work's graphic confidence.























