Avus 59 - LAT Archive Zoom

Avus 59

Motorsport Images

30x30
cm
45x45
cm
Alu Direct Print
Hanging Bars
Shadow
Gap Frame
Black/White/Oak wood
Acrylic print
Aluminium brace
Starting

135,00 €

LocationAvus circuit, Berlin, Germany
Prints issueLIMITED EDITION 30 prints ONLY
Shooting date2 Aout 1959
Original pictureNegative
Original pictureNegative
FormatsSquare
Era1858-1960
ColorsBlack&White
Motorsport Images
Motorsport Images

Motorsport Images has the largest motoring picture collection in the world. The archive houses approximately 18 million images of which in the region of half are black and white negatives and glass plates. The library is made up of images from the world of motor sport since it began and every conceivable road car since it's invention. This incredible archive is the result of the amalgamation of a number of previously separate archives, which are now housed under one roof.

Many of the images are published pictures from the magazines owned and bought by Haymarket over the years and the archive contains the original prints from the very first 'Autocar' issue published in 1895 right through to the present day issue. 'The Motor' archive contains more sporting images with black and white negatives, glass plate and acetate from 1924 - subjects include road cars, sprints, hill climbs, motor shows and Grands Prix.

The original Teesdale Company supplied pictures to 'MotorSport' magazine (founded in 1924) and Motoring News (founded in 1955) and has over 4 million black & white negatives of motor racing events from the 1920's through to the early 1990's. The first colour images appeared in the mid 1950's and 30 years of unpublished 35mm colour images remain in the LAT Black Books. LAT now supplies the Haymarket Media Group, commercial clients, the worldwide media and agencies with motor sport coverage from around the world from Formula 1 to karting.

The 'Autosport' archive contains images from the world's leading motorsport weekly. Since 1950 all aspects of motor racing from Formula 1, Le Mans and sports cars, rallying, single seaters and club racing have been photographed and archived in colour and black and white formats.

The AVUS was the first highway built in the world, west of Berlin in 1921. It will be used as a circuit for the 1926 German Grand Prix won by the local Rudolf Caracciola and then 1959, won by English Tony Brooks driving a Ferrari but it is marked by the death of the French driver Jean Behra who competed in another category the eve of the Grand Prix.
In 1936, the Olympic site encroaches on the Avus, which must be shortened. Officials decide to replace the north turn with an incredible banking at 43 ° (Indianapolis, which is so scary to F1, is only 10 °) and 12m high, quickly renamed "wall of death" by the pilots.
In this photo, Tony Brooks is leading the 1959 Grand Prix ahead of Striling Moss, who was running his 50th Grand Prix. Brooks will win his sixth and final victory at an average speed of 237,331 km/h, ahead of Dan Gurney's two other Ferraris and Phil Hill.

Write a review

Avus 59 - LAT Archive

Avus 59 - LAT Archive

You may also like

×
Newsletter
Embark with us and
get updated first on new collections
and good deals!
Subscribe