
Schadograph
<p>Christian Schad was the first early 20th–century modernist to rediscover and work with the photogram. An image made without a camera by placing an object directly on photosensitive paper and exposing the paper to light, the photogram had been known since photography’s beginnings but was newly explored by the avant–garde for the abstract, formal possibilities it afforded. Tristan Tzara, the leader of the Dada art movement, who first owned this work, dubbed these photograms “Schadographs,” a play on both the artist’s name and the shadowy forms he created with household detritus. Here, the lowly materials of dust and shoestring are ennobled, transformed by the action of light.</p> <p>The first fine artist to revive the photogram technique after World War I, Christian Schad is also the only one who liberated his images from the factory-made, rectilinear format standard for photographs. The unusual shapes of Schad’s photograms echo the sculptural wood reliefs that he made during the same period.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1919
- Dimensions
- Image/paper: 8.3 × 5.8 cm (3 5/16 × 2 5/16 in.); Mount: 16.3 × 12.1 cm (6 7/16 × 4 13/16 in.); Second mount: 26.9 × 23.8 cm (10 5/8 × 9 3/8 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Christian Schad
Artist

Photography
Christian Schad was a German painter and printmaker central to the development of New Objectivity in the 1920s. Working primarily in oils and adopting a sharp-focus realism, he depicted Berlin's nightlife, urban landscapes, and psychological portraits with unflinching precision. His technical mastery of glazing and his cool, detached treatment of subject matter, particularly in depicting cabaret scenes and social subjects, established him as one of the movement's defining voices. Schad's work combines formal control with an acerbic social gaze that resists sentimentality.
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More by Christian Schad
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Christian Schad
- Year
- 1919
- Dimensions
- Image/paper: 8.3 × 5.8 cm (3 5/16 × 2 5/16 in.); Mount: 16.3 × 12.1 cm (6 7/16 × 4 13/16 in.); Second mount: 26.9 × 23.8 cm (10 5/8 × 9 3/8 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1919-114665
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified



