Bugatti — Photography, Drawings, Literature

Bugatti — Photography, Drawings, Literature

Bugatti — Photography, Drawings, Literature

Exclusive archives documenting Bugatti from the inside — available nowhere else.

Between 1909 and 1939, Bugatti produced fewer than 8,000 cars in Molsheim, Alsace. Ettore designed the machines and directed everything around them — the coachwork, the literature, the posters, the domain itself. Jean brought the body to its highest form. What remained was a body of objects — cars, drawings, catalogs, posters — of exceptional rarity and cultural weight.

The legendary Ettore Bugatti's signature on the engine head of a 1921 Type 13 Brescia. Photo by Roberto Bigano. Buy this image in the ikonographia.com store.

This featured story is an editorial hub, conceived as a new re-editing of multiple existing stories and archival materials. It brings together previously separate contents into a single, coherent narrative framework — photography, technical drawings, and printed literature documenting Bugatti heritage from 1909 to 1952.

The archive was built between 1990 and 2009 by photographer Roberto Bigano, working with a level of access that no longer exists and cannot be replicated. It began with Romano Artioli — the Italian entrepreneur who revived the Bugatti name at Campogalliano — who gave Bigano unrestricted entry to the factory, the drawings archive, and every event that followed. No brief. No restrictions. No supervision.

This collection is not a celebration of the marque. It is a record made by someone who was trusted enough to be inside it, at the precise moment when its past and its future were in the same room.

0360-13 Mannequin in a shop window in Braunschweig, Germany, September 1979 | From "Plastic Girls" series. Photo by Roberto Bigano. Buy this image in the ikonographia.com store.

Two Bugatti Type 13 Brescia — Marone-Cinzano Estate, Tuscany, 2009.

Resting in the shade during the owners' lunch — one of 120 cars gathered for the Bugatti International Meeting.

Featured image above


Ettore Bugatti's signature — Engine head of the Type 13 Brescia, 1921.

Not a badge. Not a plate. Ettore cast his own handwriting into the metal of the engine head — his name made part of the machine itself.

The Type 13 Brescia won the first four places at the 1921 Brescia Grand Prix. This is what he signed.

Five Bodies of Work — One Complete Archive

What resulted is not a single project. It is five distinct bodies of work — factory drawings, printed literature, posters, studio photography, and documentary reportage — built across two decades, most of it unpublished until now. Together they form the most complete visual record of Bugatti heritage in private hands.

Bugatti Type 41 Royale Coupé Napoléon, 1929 — bonnet detail with Rembrandt Bugatti elephant mascot. Photographed by Roberto Bigano at the Musée National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse.

Bugatti Type 41 Royale Coupé Napoléon — Bonnet and Rampant Elephant, 1929

Ettore's personal car — 7.2 metres long, the largest automobile ever built, conceived for royalty and driven by its maker.

The elephant on the radiator was sculpted by Rembrandt Bugatti, Ettore's younger brother, one of the great animal sculptors of his generation. Six Royales were completed. This is one of them.

The Lost Factory Drawings

Between 1922 and 1935, the Molsheim factory produced the technical drawings that defined how Bugatti cars were built — body designs, mechanical specifications, production templates, drawn by hand on paper and cloth.

Reproduced in 1990 before disappearing, these images may be the only surviving record. Ikonographia presents them in three chapters — Form, Function, and Obsession — examining why they remain unique.

August 1984 - Beverly Hills, California - From "Plastic Girls" series. Photo Roberto Bigano.

Dessin N° 1070 — Coupé Atalante sur Chassis Type 57 — 1935

Side elevation and plan view. Pencil on tracing paper. The body design was Jean Bugatti's. The factory drawings were the work of his technical team at Molsheim. 

Detail of Bugatti’s patented Monobloc aluminum wheel design from a 1932 technical drawing.

The Bugatti Monobloc Cast Aluminum Wheel — Patented 1924

The first single-piece cast aluminum wheel in automotive history. This heliographic print, dated 22 July 1932, is a first-generation factory copy made directly from the original drawing and distributed to the production department. The spoke section shown here specifies eight high ribs and eight low ribs following the template, with all radii and tolerances called out in millimeters.
The geometry is not only structural — the alternating rib heights reduce weight while maintaining rigidity, a solution that remained technically advanced for its era. Eight years after the original patent, the drawing shows no uncertainty. Every line was already resolved.

Like the Vitruvian Man, it is a study in proportion where engineering and beauty become the same thing.

August 1984 - Beverly Hills, California - From "Plastic Girls" series. Photo Roberto Bigano.

Dessin N° 1082 — Roadster sur Chassis Type 57S — 1935.

The surbaissé chassis — lowered by passing the rear axle through the frame members. Jean Bugatti's final and most aerodynamic variant of the Type 57 line. Pencil on tracing paper.

Bugatti Catalogs and Literature

Bugatti's catalogs and brochures were produced inside Molsheim under the same standards as the cars. Ettore and Jean directed everything — the typography, the photography, the choice of illustrators. The archive covers the full range of printed literature from the 1920s through 1939, the year Jean died and the pre-war chapter closed.

Depliant Bugatti Type 44 3 litres 1929

Dépliant Bugatti Type 44, 3 litres — Centerfold, 1929.

The centerfold of the Type 44 folder places the car in front of Château Saint-Jean — Bugatti's headquarters in Molsheim. T

he two figures beside it are Lidia and Michel Bugatti, two of Ettore's children. The photograph is not incidental. Molsheim was not a factory with a family attached. It was a domain, and the catalog knew it.

Bugatti Berline 3 places avec spider sur chassis 3 litres. Photo

Bugatti Berline 3 places avec spider sur chassis 3 litres. — Central double spread.
Photo Carabin.

The second body variant in the same 1928 brochure series. Same photographer, same studio discipline.

The two Carabin photographs and the two Hemjic covers were designed as pairs — the machine and its ancestry, facing each other across the fold.

Bugatti Type 57 Modeles 1939

Bugatti Type 57 Modèles 1939. Berline Galibier 4-5 places. Visibilité. Accessibilité. Confort.reet and Regent Street series.

The three words beneath the model name are the brochure's argument in miniature — the same logic that organized the 1936 catalog, compressed into a single line.

The Galibier was the largest body in the Type 57 range. The claims are precise and in the correct order.

Bugatti Posters

Bugatti commissioned its advertising posters from the finest graphic artists of the era — Cassandre, Marcello Dudovich, René Vincent, Geo Ham. The results are among the most celebrated works in automotive poster art. Cassandre's 1935 Le Pur-Sang des Automobiles remains the definitive image of the marque. Dudovich's 1922 C'è una Bugatti, non si passa is a masterpiece of symbolic compression.

The originals were held in the Campogalliano archive. Roberto Bigano borrowed and reproduced them in his studio — the same access that produced the factory drawings. The archive presents the most significant surviving examples, reproduced directly from the originals.

Le Pur-Sang Des Automobiles. Art by Cassandre 1935. An iconic 1935 Bugatti Poster by Cassandre, pseudonym of Adolphe Jean-Marie Mouron.

Le Pur-Sang des Automobiles — Cassandre, 1935.

The image that defined Bugatti's identity for a century — by the greatest poster artist of its time.
Reproduced from the original

C’è una Bugatti, non si passa (There's a Bugatti, you can't pass.) Poster by Marcello Dudovich 1922 Dimensions: 195x140 cm Printer: Edizioni STAR . Officine IGAP, Milano This masterpiece is rich in symbolism, beginning with the title that emphasizes Bugatti's legendary invincibility. The model portrayed is the Type 13 Brescia.

C'è una Bugatti, non si passa — Marcello Dudovich, 1922

A masterpiece of symbolic compression: the title declares Bugatti's invincibility, the red scarf trailing from the figure echoes the death of Isadora Duncan — who died when her scarf caught in the wheel of a Bugatti.

Except that happened five years later. Dudovich was simply ahead of events.

Bugatti Automobiles et Autorails. 1935 - Art by R.Geri

Bugatti Automobiles et Autorails — R. Geri, 1935

One of the rarest original Bugatti posters — printed in Strasbourg by A. Michel on thin paper.
The subject is the Bugatti autorail, the high-speed diesel railcar that Ettore designed for SNCF alongside his automobiles. Geri's full name remains untraced.

The poster is better documented than its maker.
Reproduced from the original.

Divina Bugatti

In 1991, Franco Maria Ricci — the most exacting publisher in Italy — commissioned Roberto Bigano to document the historic Bugatti collection at the Musée National de l'Automobile in Mulhouse.
The resulting book set the visual standard for Bugatti photography. Published in two editions of 5,000 copies each, both sold out.

One image from the session was rejected by Ricci as "not objective." It spent seventeen years in a box. It is now the profile banner of this archive.

The Elephant carved by Rembrandt Bugatti, right on top of the radiator grill of the Type 41 Royale Coupé Napoleon, the personal car of Ettore Bugatti. It was an elephant standing on his back legs, with the erect trunk as a symbol of aggression and coupling (1929) - Courtesy: Musée National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse. Photo by Roberto Bigano. Courtesy: Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse. Buy this image at Ikonographia.com store

The Elephant carved by Rembrandt Bugatti, right on top of the radiator grill of the Type 41 Royale Coupé Napoleon, the personal car of Ettore Bugatti.

It was an elephant standing on his back legs, with the erect trunk as a symbol of aggression and coupling (1929).

Courtesy: Musée National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse.

A 1937 Bugatti Type 57SC Coupé Atlantic. Detail of the windshield and wipers emphasizing the riveted crest. Jean Bugatti designed the half-body ending in a crest. He then reverted the first part right-left and finally joined the two pieces with rivets in one of the most daring automotive designs. Photo by Roberto Bigano. Courtesy: British Garage, Paris. Buy this image at Ikonographia.com store

Bugatti Type 57SC Coupé Atlantic — Detail of the riveted crest, 1937.

Jean Bugatti designed the half-body ending in a crest, reversed it, and joined the two halves with rivets — one of the most daring forms in automotive history.

This image and the two Royale photographs were the only non-orthogonal pictures Franco Maria Ricci ever published. He approved them with a stern expression and a warning: "I never publish this kind of image. These are so beautiful that I must. Please don't do it again."

Courtesy: British Garage, Paris

Bugatti Type 35B Sport Two-seater, US Coachwork (1927). Photo by Roberto Bigano. Courtesy: Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse. Buy this image at Ikonographia.com store

Bugatti Type 35B Sport Two-seater, US Coachwork — Rear view, 1927.

Purists consider the American coachwork a deviation from the original design.
The photograph disagreed.

Courtesy: Musée National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse.

Bugatti Masterpieces of the 1920s and 1930s

A gallery of the most significant models documented by Roberto Bigano — from the Type 13 Brescia and the Type 35 Grand Prix to the Type 41 Royale and the Type 57 Atlantic. Each model presented with exclusive photography and historical context.

Bugatti Type 35B Grand Prix Biplace Course - Two Seater Racing

Bugatti Type 35B Grand Prix Biplace Course Two-Seater Racing — 1927.

Produced between 1924 and 1930, the Type 35 was phenomenally successful — over 1,000 race victories, 14 weekly wins at its peak, five consecutive Targa Florios from 1925 through 1929. No racing car of its era approached this record.

Photographed at Campogalliano on the rotating platform of the circular building — the same archive that held the factory drawings.

A 1937 Bugatti Type 57SC Coupé Atlantic lightened in silhouette mode to emphasize the flowing coupé lines

Bugatti Type 57SC Coupé Atlantic — Roofline and riveted spine, 1937.

Shot through the night at British Garage, Paris — exhausted, hungry, unable to properly light the riveted crest. My assistant was moving across the set with a Fresnel spot still open. For a moment the light caught the spine exactly as it should. "Stop." The photograph happened.

The dust on the bodywork made it unusable for twenty years, until Photoshop made the restoration possible.

Bugatti Type 32 Biplace Course "Tank" (1923). This striking, unexpected rear view emphasizes the aerodynamics of the design. Photo by Roberto Bigano. Courtesy: Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse. Buy this image at Ikonographia.com store

Bugatti Type 32 Biplace Course "Tank" — Rear view, 1923.

One of the first racing cars designed around aerodynamic principles — the body enclosing the wheels, the silhouette a single uninterrupted form.

This rear view reveals the engineering logic: everything hidden, everything intentional. Among the first racing cars to use four-wheel braking.
Courtesy: Musée National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse.

Bugatti Glamour

Four nights of open-air studio sessions during the Centenary celebrations — the historic cars photographed not in a museum but in the hands of their owners, who followed the shoots, helped position the cars, and sometimes stepped in front of the lens themselves.

Roberto Bigano also audio-recorded the owners telling the story of their relationship with the marque. At least four of these recordings are exceptional primary source documents of Bugatti history — among them, the son of the former owner of the silhouetted Atalante.

Bugatti Type 37A, "Flighty" (1928) - Owners, Frederica and Simon Fitzpatrick, Guernsey © Roberto Bigano/ ikonographoa.com Browse the Bugatti Archive https://www.ikonographia.com/archive/the-bugatti-archive/

Bugatti Type 37A "Flighty," 1928. Owners: Frederica and Simon Fitzpatrick, Guernsey.

The Fitzpatricks named and treated their 65 cars as members of the family — from their oldest Bugattis to their latest VW Golf. On the last night of the sessions, Roberto Bigano presented Frederica with a large print of this photograph. She went immediately to show it to the car. "Flighty is enthusiast," she said. Would you sell your son just because he's old?

Bugatti Type 40A 1931. Owner Ivanno Frascari, Italy. Photo Roberto Bigano. https://www.ikonographia.com/archive/the-bugatti-archive/

Bugatti Type 40A — Owner: Ivanno Frascari, Italy, 1931.

The yellow and black livery was the factory's own choice — Bugatti's colours from the beginning. Frascari brought it to Castiglione for the Centenary Meeting.

Bugatti Type 57S Atalante 1931 Chassis 001, back view. Owner Franz Wassmer

Bugatti Type 57S Atalante — Chassis 001, 1931. Owner: Franz Wassmer, Switzerland.

Franz Wassmer's father owned the Atalante now held at the Musée National de l'Automobile in Mulhouse. In summer, the car's cabin became unbearably hot. His mother's solution was to rest her feet out of the window. His father's solution was final: "Enlève tes pieds de la fenêtre, sinon je vends la voiture." He sold it.

Franz was a boy. He loved that car. The sale left a wound that decades of ordinary life could not close.

He became a billionaire. He bought Chassis 001.
Roberto Bigano recorded him at Castiglione telling this story. The voice on the recording is not that of a billionaire. It is that of a boy who never stopped wanting his father's car back.

This image and the full account were published in Victor, the Hasselblad magazine.

The Bugatti International Meeting — Tuscany, 2009

Developed with the Bugatti Club Italia and supported by Hasselblad and Manfrotto, this archive followed the historic cars through the Centenary celebrations — in motion, in context, in the hands of their owners.

Among its most significant chapters: 120 owners and their cars gathered in Tuscany — on the lawn at Marone-Cinzano, in the medieval piazza of Massa Marittima. The panoramic photograph of that afternoon — 13,000 pixels wide, a single stitched frame — is the most complete document of what the meeting actually was.

0360-13 Mannequin in a shop window in Braunschweig, Germany, September 1979 | From "Plastic Girls" series. Photo by Roberto Bigano. Buy this image in the ikonographia.com store.

Bugatti International Meeting — Piazza Garibaldi, Massa Marittima, Tuscany, 2009.

One hundred and twenty Bugattis gathered in a medieval piazza in front of a thirteenth-century cathedral. Owners from across the world — Europe, the Americas, Australia.

Detail of Bugatti’s Monobloc Cast Aluminum Wheel drawing, dated July 27, 1932 (Roue Bugatti brevetée en aluminium coulé).

Bugatti International Meeting — Marone-Cinzano Estate, Tuscany, 2009

The Bugatti Centenary. Two hundred and fifty owners gathered from across the world on one of Tuscany's great estates — lunching under the cypresses, Brunello di Montalcino on the table. On the lawn, 125 historic Bugattis on open display: the largest gathering of the marque ever assembled in one place.

Documented from above, stitching multiple Hasselblad frames from a 12-metre tripod into a single panoramic frame 13,000 pixels wide. An event that will not happen again, recorded as it deserved to be.

Bugatti Type 57S Atalante 1931 Chassis 001, back view. Owner Franz Wassmer

Bugatti International Meeting — Castello Colle Massari, Tuscany, 2009.

A stop at a medieval fortress in the Maremma — a toast, the cars clustered on the grass, the owners still laughing. No programme, no ceremony. Just two hundred and fifty people who shared the same unreasonable passion, in one of the most beautiful corners of Tuscany, at the end of a Bugatti day.

A collective portrait that needed no posing.

The Spirit of Bugatti — Alsace, 1990

Before the restoration of Molsheim began, Roberto Bigano documented what remained of the original Bugatti world — the factory, the château, the surroundings — in the last months before Bugatti Automobili's revival would briefly transform it. The horse on the wall of Château Saint-Jean, tangled in dead vines: Ettore's symbol surviving in a building no one was looking after.

Bugatti Type 57S Atalante 1931 Chassis 001, back view. Owner Franz Wassmer

The Portal of Château Saint-Jean — Molsheim, Alsace, 1990.

The entrance to Ettore Bugatti's former headquarters — once the center of an estate with workshops, a hotel, and a way of receiving clients that had no equivalent in the industry. If your car needed attention, you came to Molsheim. You were a guest until it was ready.

Photographed a year before the revival began. The portal was still standing. Not much else was.

Detail of Bugatti’s Monobloc Cast Aluminum Wheel drawing, dated July 27, 1932 (Roue Bugatti brevetée en aluminium coulé).

Château Saint-Jean, Molsheim, Alsace, 1990 — Ettore Bugatti's horse.

Ettore Bugatti bred thoroughbreds at Molsheim with the same obsessive standards he applied to his cars. The horse was his personal symbol — cast into the wall of Château Saint-Jean, the domain's heart, where it had presided over the estate for decades.

By 1990, no one was looking after it. The vines had grown across the facade and through the relief itself, threading through the stone as if reclaiming it. The building was between two lives.

The image was never published. The rebirth of the brand was already being planned. This was its symbol, waiting on the wall. Nobody saw it that way.

Copyright, Links And Credits

Photography, Copyright & Credits

These images are part of the Ikonographia Visual Archives: — Bugatti Heritage Collection —  Bugatti Factory Drawings  Archive.
All drawings reproduced by Roberto Bigano in 1990 from originals held in the Bugatti factory archive. The current location of the originals is unknown.
All photographs © Ikonographia / Roberto Bigano — All Rights Reserved.

Terms of Use (Summary)

The images presented in this archive are copyrighted and available for licensed use only through Ikonographia Visual Archives.

You may not download, reproduce, publish, or distribute these images without a valid license. For commercial or editorial licensing, please refer to the product pages or contact Ikonographia directly. A full explanation of licensing terms is available in the Shop / Licensing Information section under "Ikonographia — Standard License" and "Ikonographia — Merchandising & Product Use Licenses"

The Ikonographia Bugatti Heritage Archive

Between 1990 and 2009, photographer Roberto Bigano documented Bugatti with a level of access that no longer exists and cannot be replicated. The relationship began with Romano Artioli — the Italian entrepreneur who had just acquired the Bugatti name and was preparing its revival at Campogalliano — who gave Roberto carte blanche to work inside the factory, the archive, and every event that followed. No brief. No restrictions. No supervision.

What resulted is not a single project but five distinct bodies of work: the factory technical drawings reproduced before they disappeared, two major photographic commissions on the historic cars, a complete documentary record of the Bugatti International Centenary Meeting in Tuscany, and an Alsatian reportage made inside Molsheim before the restoration began. Together they form one of the most complete private archives of Bugatti heritage in existence — most of it unpublished until now, some of it available nowhere else.

The archive is not a celebration of the marque. It is a record made by someone who was trusted enough to be inside it, at the precise moment when its past and its future were in the same room.

Credits & Acknowledgments

Ikonographia gratefully acknowledges the fundamental contribution of Romano Artioli, founder of Bugatti Automobili, without whose trust and unrestricted access this archive would not exist.

Ikonographia Mission Statement

Ikonographia is committed to the accurate documentation, preservation, and ethical dissemination of twentieth-century visual culture.

Archival Notes

These drawings were reproduced by Roberto Bigano in 1990, during the preparation for the revival of Bugatti Automobili at Campogalliano. Access to the Bugatti factory archive was granted by Romano Artioli. The drawings document the original Molsheim factory production.

Further Reading (Selected Sources)

The most intriguing British Dunlop ads of the thirties.

The most intriguing British Dunlop ads of the thirties.

Vintage Cars

Apr 30, 2025

The Bystander 1938-05-25_301 Dunlop

About Dunlop Tyre


Dunlop is an iconic British brand, created in 1888 by John Boyd Dunlop, who invented the pneumatic tire, a revolutionary creation that transformed the automotive industry. Inspired by his son's tricycle struggles with hard rubber tires, this practical air-filled tire, patented by Dunlop, laid the foundation for the Dunlop Pneumatic Tire Co. Ltd. in Dublin, Ireland.

By the start of World War II, Dunlop had become synonymous with success across a diverse range of industries. Not only did it dominate the tire market, both on and off the racetrack, but it also excelled in the production of brakes, wheels, golf and tennis balls, flooring, and other industrial rubber products.

The original Dunlop company no longer exists as a corporate entity; the name lives on in several Dunlop-branded products owned by different companies, including automotive, aerospatial, industrial, and sporting products around the world.

Distinction. Wealthy couple in evening dress. Dunlop Reinforced Tyre ad 1933

DISTINCTION.
Dunlop Reinforced Ad.
The Sketch Magazine.
March 22, 1933

Dunlop Advertisement in the United Kingdom.


Throughout the 20th century, Dunlop was one of the leading advertisers in the United Kingdom. In the 1930s, the company launched several advertising campaigns. Still, in this story, we will focus on the most intriguing campaign, from 1933 to 1938, featuring beautiful illustrations created by various artists.

The illustrations are carefully crafted to depict a variety of social situations, often of an exclusive nature. Even when the Dunlop tire is not the central focus, it manages to make a striking appearance, leaving a lasting impression.

Unfortunately, most artworks were not credited or signed, and it was impossible to trace the authors.
It's almost unbelievable, but despite the brand's significance and the hundreds of ads published, the documentation is incredibly scarce, underscoring the rarity and value of the information we do have.
One notable exception is a series of ads from 1936. In this campaign, the company made a significant move by hiring leading illustrators and painters. What's more, readers could even request a free reproduction of the artworks.

Aristocrats. Elegant lady with greyhounds. Dunlop Ad, by Neil Baylis. Britannia & Eve, February 1933

Aristocrats. Elegant lady with greyhounds.
Dunlop Tire Ad.
Artwork by Neil Baylis.

Britannia and Eve Magazine.
February 1933.

A wealthy couple's night Swim. Dunlop Ad. Britannia & Eve, August 1933

A wealthy, elegant couple night swim.
Dunlop Tire Ad.
Britannia and Eve Magazine.
August 1933

Masters. Rider and hounds leaving for fox hunting. Dunlop Ad on The Sketch, November 1933.

Masters. Riders and hounds leaving for fox hunting.
Dunlop Advertisement.

The Sketch, November 1933.

Goodwill. Dunlop season greetings for a 1933 advertisement. Britannia and Eve, December 1933.

Goodwill. Dunlop season greetings.

Britannia and Eve Magazine.
December 1933.

Greeting friends on the riverfront with a Dunlop Tire in the foreground . the Tatler, May 2, 1934.

Greeting friends on the riverfront with a Dunlop Tire in the foreground.
Dunlop Tire Ad.

The Tatler, May 2, 1934

Night traffic jam on icy streets. Dunlop Ad. The Tatler, October 31, 1934

Night traffic jam on icy streets.
Dunlop Tire Ad.

The Tatler, October 31, 1934.

Perfect Control. Traffic cop in London. Dunlop Fort 90 tire ad. Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News - Friday 12 April 1935

Perfect Control. Traffic cop in London. Dunlop Fort 90 tire ad.

Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic New, August 9, 1935

A military salute at an officer's wedding. Dunlop Fort 90 tire ad. Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, June 21, 1935.

A military salute at an officer's wedding.
Dunlop Tire Ad.

Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, June 21, 1935.

A peacock and a Dunlop Fort "90" tire. Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic New, August 9, 1935

A peacock and a Dunlop Fort "90" tire advertisement.

Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, August 9, 1935.

Dunlop Season Greetings 1935 with a car and a toy car with Dunlop Fort "90" tires. Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, December 13, 1935.

Dunlop Season Greetings 1935 with a car and a toy car with Dunlop Fort "90" tires.

Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, December 13, 1935.

Surreal fall landscape with a lake, art by Ernest Wallcousins. Dunlop ad 1935. Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News October 4, 1935.

Surreal fall landscape with a lake.
Painting by Ernest Wallcousins.
Dunlop advertisement 1935.

Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, October 4, 1935

Merry Xmas. Dunlop season greetings 1936 advertisement. Art by Gerry Wood. Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, December 18, 1936.

Merry Xmas. Dunlop season greetings, 1936 ad.
Artwork by Gerry Wood.

Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, December 18, 1936.

The 1936 campaign by leading artists.


As said, until 1935, the company didn't credit the artists.
For the 1936 advertising campaign, Dunlop enlisted some of the leading artists of the time, primarily landscape painters, a different one for each ad. Readers could receive a free color reproduction of the original artwork.
W. Smithson Broadhead's illustration stood out as the most beautiful among these.

Fox hunting on a country road. Painting by Algernon Talmage. Dunlop ad. Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, February 21, 1936.

Fox hunting on a country road. Painting by Algernon Talmage. Dunlop ad.

Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, February 21, 1936.

Spring blossoms in a country village. Artwork by Ernest Wallcousins for a Dunlop ad. Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, May 22, 1936.

Spring blossoms in a country village. Artwork by Ernest Wallcousins.
Dunlop ad.

Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, May 22, 1936.

A giant bare tree in a country village. Dunlop ad. Painting by James Bateman. The Bystander, March 4, 1936

A giant bare tree in a country village. Dunlop ad. Painting by James Bateman.

The Bystander, March 4, 1936

A lady in sports attire at a polo match. Painting by Smithson Broadhead. Dunlop ad. Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, June 19, 1936.

A lady in sports attire at a polo match. Painting by Smithson Broadhead.
Dunlop ad.

Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, June 19, 1936.

An Idyllic fall landscape with a lake. Painting by Lamorna Birch. Dunlop ad. Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, October 2, 1936.

An Idyllic fall landscape with a lake. Painting by Lamorna Birch. Dunlop ad.

Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, June 19, 1936.

Driving on a winter night on a country road, Dunlop Ad 1936. Artwork by Christopher Nevinson. Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic, November 13, 1936

Driving on a winter night on a country road, Dunlop Ad 1936.
Artwork by Christopher Nevinson.

Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic, November 13, 1936

Lastly, the remarkable advertisements from 1938.


Lastly, the remarkable advertisements from 1938 are truly noteworthy. Unfortunately, the company once again neglected to credit the artists involved. We are diligently working to uncover their names or to decipher any signatures where available.

1938 marked the last time Dunlop used organic campaigns featuring color illustrations. In the years that followed, the company made significant changes to its advertising style.

Tennis and golf players with Dunlop Fort tires and balls advertisement. The Bystander, March 25, 1938.

1938 Tennis and golf players’ advertisement, featuring the Dunlop range, including Dunlop tires, balls, rackets, and sportswear. 

The Bystander, March 25, 1938.


Dunlop Tyres-- first in 1888 are first today. Supremacy in the world of tyres is reflected today in the sphere of sport. Dunlop Golf and Tennis Balls, Rackets, Sportswear and Footwear are famous all over the world. Each Dunlop product is made in a specialised factory to the highest standard of quality.

A 1938 Dunlop ad featuring an Armstrong Whitworth Ensign of Imperial Airways aircraft and a classic car. The Bystander July 13, 1938. This image focuses on two of Dunlop's favorite topics: elegance and sophistication associated with luxury and the progress and innovation of the 1930s, highlighting technological advancements in air and land travel.

A 1938 Dunlop ad featuring an Armstrong Whitworth Ensign of Imperial Airways aircraft and a classic car.

The Bystander, July 13, 1938.

This image focuses on two of Dunlop's favorite topics: elegance and sophistication associated with luxury and the progress and innovation of the 1930s, highlighting technological advancements in air and land travel.


Had it not been for John Boyd Dunlop's invention of the pneumatic tyre in 1888, even man's conquest of the air might have been long delayed. It was the Dunlop tyre which made possible every form of smooth, swift progress on the ground or off it. More than that, landing Tyres have contributed materially to the progressive development of aviation. Trust yourself only to the first and still foremost of all tyres.

Trucks and transportation 1938 Dunlop advertisement. The Bystander, September 21, 1938.

Trucks and transportation 1938 Dunlop advertisement.

The Bystander, September 21, 1938.


The wheels of modern industry run more swiftly and more smoothly since Dunlop invented his pneumatic tyre in 1888. With the progress it initiated Dunlop keeps pace. Every tyre need for modern transport has been and will always be, met by Dunlop.

Trucks and transportation 1938 Dunlop advertisement. The Bystander, September 21, 1938.

Dunlop ad featuring a riding lady and Dunlop Fort tires.
Artwork by Jean Bowman.

The Bystander, November 9, 1938.


The dependability of DUNLOP Tyres and the safety they ensure are accepted universally. So now is the supreme excellence of DUNLOP Weather-wear and Sports-wear in which, again, the protective factor is inseparable from style, distinction, and inherent quality. In fact, the name is synonymous with safety and protection.

Copyright, Links and credits

All the photographs on this page are copyrighted to Roberto Bigano.

LINKS

The Architectural Forum. Reliefs And Grilles Of The Chanin Building Vestibules.
Architectural Design, May 1929, page 693 >

The Chanin Building Wikipedia >

Bugatti Catalogs and Literature — 1920s and 1930s

Bugatti Catalogs and Literature — 1920s and 1930s

Bugatti Catalogs and Literature — 1920s and 1930s

Sales literature from Molsheim — spare, original, and entirely their own.

Bugatti's catalogs and brochures were rarely credited to outside agencies. With limited budgets and no inherited house style, the results reflect the same standards applied to the cars — functional, precise, occasionally brilliant. The 1937 Type 57 range catalog is the centerpiece: Alexis Kow's cover, the only signed work in the catalog, pairs the Le Mans-winning Type 57 Sport with Ettore's streamlined Autorail — the locomotive he designed in a week to keep his workforce employed.

Detail of Bugatti’s Monobloc Cast Aluminum Wheel drawing, dated July 27, 1932 (Roue Bugatti brevetée en aluminium coulé).

Ettore, Jean and the Bugatti Literature

Most people know the Bugatti posters — Cassandre, Dudovich, René Vincent, Géo Ham. The catalogs are less studied, and less understood. They should not be.

Ettore Bugatti trained at the Brera School of Art in Milan before he built his first engine. That formation never left him. Everything Bugatti produced — the cars, the furniture, the factory buildings, the printed literature — was subject to the same standard: nothing without necessity, nothing without form. The catalogs were not marketing material handed to an agency. They were made inside Molsheim, under the same scrutiny as the chassis.

From 1930, Ettore progressively passed the design pen to his son Jean, who had grown up inside the factory and understood its logic from the inside. The catalogs changed with him — leaner, more confident, the typography tightened, the illustrations more willing to let the car speak without explanation.

Bugatti Type 44 catalog double spread. Nouvelle 3 litres 8 cylindres 17 cv, Weissman Bodywork, circa 1925

Bugatti Type 44, Nouvelle 3 litres 8 cylindres 17 CV. Double spread with three body variants by Weissman, circa 1925.

Three coachwork interpretations of the same chassis on a single spread. The layout is spare — photograph, body designation, nothing more.

Weissman's bodywork is presented as a catalogue of possibilities rather than a hierarchy. The customer chose. The chassis was already resolved.

Depliant Bugatti Type 44 3 litres 1929

Dépliant Bugatti Type 44, 3 litres — Centerfold, 1929.

The centerfold of the Type 44 folder places the car in front of Château Saint-Jean — Bugatti's headquarters in Molsheim.

The two figures beside it are Lidia and Michel Bugatti, two of Ettore's children. The photograph is not incidental. Molsheim was not a factory with a family attached. It was a domain, and the catalog knew it.

A Literature Without Credits

Bugatti brochures were almost never signed. The company had no advertising department in the modern sense. Ettore and Jean directed everything, and the people who executed their directions worked without attribution.

Two exceptions: Alexis Kow, the leading French automobile illustrator of the period, signed the 1937 Type 57 catalog drawings. And the company photographer, Mr. Carabin, is credited on several of the 1928 brochure photographs. Everyone else remains anonymous — which, in Molsheim, was the norm rather than the exception.

The budget was modest by the standards of the major manufacturers. It never showed.

Bugatti Type 57 Catalog 1937. The 3 litres engine specifications.

Bugatti Type 57, 3 litres engine specifications. Double spread from the 1937 catalog.

Left: Artist Joseph Low pulling an impression on his hand press. Below: Low inside his rural New Jersey studio-print shop with its old-fashioned stove (bottom), a linoleum block locked up in a printing form, and the finished print. Right page: An enlarged detail from the same linoleum print displays the vigor and fantasy of Low’s engraving style. Photographs by Ed Feingersh. Pages 64-65

The 1928 Brochures and the Carriage Argument

The 1928 catalogs make an argument that no other car manufacturer would have dared. On the cover: a vintage carriage, drawn by Marcel Jacques Hemjic — an eighteenth-century chaise, or a mid-nineteenth century coupé à huit ressorts, rendered with the precision of a period engraving. Inside: Carabin's photographs of the current Bugatti model, the Type 44 or the Berline, sitting on its chassis in studio light.

The pairing was Ettore's idea. He collected carriages. He believed the Bugatti, in its proportions and its attention to coachwork, was the direct heir to the finest horse-drawn vehicles — not a rupture with that tradition but its continuation in a new material. The catalogs said so without a word of explanation.

Bugatti Coupè Berline 2-3 places avec spider sur chassis 3 litres. Photo by Carabin for a 1928 catalog

Bugatti Coupé Berline 2-3 places avec spider sur chassis 3 litres — Central double spread.
Photo Carabin.

Carabin was the company photographer — one of two people credited by name in the entire Bugatti catalog archive. The studio light is controlled and neutral. The car requires no setting.

Bugatti Coupè Berline 2-3 places avec spider sur chassis 3 litres. Coupé a huit resorts. Milieu du XIX Siecle.(Eight-spring coupe. Mid-19th century.) Artwork by Marcel Jacques Hemjic for a 1928 brochure cover.

Bugatti Berline 3 places avec spider sur chassis 3 litres — Cover.
Vintage carriage artwork by Marcel Jacques Hemjic.

The cover did not show the car being sold. It showed an eighteenth-century coupé à huit ressorts — an eight-spring carriage from the mid-nineteenth century, drawn with the precision of a period engraving. Ettore collected carriages. He believed the Bugatti was their direct heir, and the catalog said so without explanation.

Bugatti Berline 3 places avec spider sur chassis 3 litres. Photo

Bugatti Berline 3 places avec spider sur chassis 3 litres. — Central double spread.
Photo Carabin.

The second body variant in the same 1928 brochure series. Same photographer, same studio discipline.

The two Carabin photographs and the two Hemjic covers were designed as pairs — the machine and its ancestry, facing each other across the fold.

Bugatti Berline 3 places avec spider sur chassis 3 litres. Chaise Monte Sur son train. XVIII siècle. Artwork by Marcel Jacques Hemjic for a 1928 brochure cover.

Bugatti Berline 3 places avec spider sur chassis 3 litres — Cover — Chaise montée sur son train, XVIIe siècle.
Vintage carriage artwork by Marcel Jacques Hemjic.

A seventeenth-century travelling chaise, suspended on its carriage frame. The argument is the same as the facing cover — lineage rather than novelty.

In 1928, every other car manufacturer was selling the future. Bugatti was selling continuity with the finest things ever built on wheels.

The 1936 Blueprint Brochure

The Type 57 range brochure of 1936 took a different approach entirely. Four fold-out leaflets, each presenting one body version in blueprint-style line drawings: the Galibier, the Ventoux, the Atalante, the Stelvio. The drawing method borrowed from the factory floor — technical authority applied to a commercial document.

Two models were missing: the Atlantic and the Roadster. No explanation was given then or since.

Bugatti Type 57 Range Brochure 1936 in a blueprint style drawings.. Four pages.

Bugatti Type 57 range brochure, 1936 — Four fold-out leaflets in blueprint-style drawings: Galibier, Ventoux, Atalante, Stelvio.

The drawing method came from the factory floor — technical authority applied to a commercial document. Each model received its own leaflet, its own set of lines.

Two variants in the range were not included: the Atlantic and the Roadster. No explanation was given then or since.

The 1937 Catalog and Alexis Kow

The 1937 Type 57 range catalog is the most complete statement of Jean's commercial vision. Kow's illustrations stretch the car slightly — the proportions are pushed toward elegance, the shadow work emphasizes speed over mass. It is illustration rather than technical record, and it reads as Jean would have wanted: the car as an object of desire, not a specification sheet.

The cover pairs the Type 57 Sport — winner at Le Mans, holder of the 218 km/h speed record — with the streamlined Bugatti Autorail. Two worlds Bugatti occupied simultaneously: the road and the railway, both made faster than they had any right to be.


Bugatti Type 57 Catalog 1937. Cover drawing by Alexis Kow

Bugatti Type 57 catalog, 1937 — Cover drawing by Alexis Kow.

The cover pairs two Bugatti worlds: the Type 57 Sport, winner at Le Mans and holder of the 218 km/h speed record, and the streamlined Autorail — the locomotive Ettore designed in a week to save his workforce.

Kow's illustration was the only signed work in the catalog. Everything else was Molsheim's.

Bugatti Type 57 Catalog 1937. The T57 3 litres engine Grand Prix Winner

Bugatti Type 57, 3 litres engine. "Vainqueur." From the 1937 Type 57 range catalog.

Vainqueur — winner.
The 1936 season: Grand Prix de l'ACF, de La Marne, de Deauville, du Comminges, and the speed record at 218 km/h.

In 1937, Jean-Pierre Wimille and Robert Benoist won the 24 Hours of Le Mans and covered 3,287 kilometres in 24 hours. The catalog did not need to say more.

Bugatti Type 57 Brochure 1937 Coupé Atalante, page 6,7. Drawing by Alexis Kow

Bugatti Type 57 Coupé Atalante. Double spread from the 1937 catalog. Drawing by Alexis Kow.

The Atalante roofline resolves in a single continuous arc from windshield to tail — a curve that Jean drew once and never needed to revise. Kow understood that the illustration's job was to follow the line, not interpret it.

Bugatti Type 57 Catalog 1937, Coupé Atlantic. Drawing by Alexis

Bugatti Type 57S Coupé Atlantic. From the 1937 catalog. Drawing by Alexis Kow.

The Atlantic was built in four examples. Its body was riveted along the spine — the seam running from nose to tail — because the magnesium alloy panels could not be welded without risk of fire.

A constraint became the most recognizable detail in the car's history.

Bugatti Type 57 Brochure 1937 Roadster Sport, page 9. Drawing by Alexis Kow

Bugatti Type 57S Roadster Sport 2 places. From the 1937 catalog. Drawing by Alexis Kow.

The lightest body in the Type 57 range. Ultra-light alloy construction, competition-type profiling.

Kow gave it the longest shadow of any car in the catalog — the one concession to drama in an otherwise disciplined set of drawings.

Bugatti Type 57 Brochure 1937, page 10 Coach Ventoux Drawing by Alexis Kow. 4-5 Places

Bugatti Type 57 Coach Ventoux 4-5 places. From the 1937 catalog. Drawing by Alexis Kow.

The Ventoux was the family car in the Type 57 range — four to five seats, the most practical body Jean designed. It carried the same name logic as the Stelvio and the Aravis: a mountain pass, a road with a reason to be driven.

From Ettore to Jean — The 1939 Catalog

The cover of the 1939 Type 57 Modèles brochure is the last major statement in Bugatti's pre-war literature. Jean designed it, or directed its design, with the same compression he brought to the cars themselves. The typography is spare. The image carries everything.

Jean died in a car crash a few months after this catalog appeared. The brochure had no way of knowing it was a conclusion.

Bugatti Type 57 Modeles 1939

Bugatti Type 57 Modèles 1939. Brochure cover.

Jean designed this cover, or directed its design, with the same compression he brought to the cars.
The typography is spare. The image carries everything.

He died in a car crash a few months after it appeared.

Bugatti Type 57 Modeles 1939

Bugatti Type 57 Modèles 1939. Berline Galibier 4-5 places. Visibilité. Accessibilité. Confort.reet and Regent Street series.

The three words beneath the model name are the brochure's argument in miniature — the same logic that organized the 1936 catalog, compressed into a single line.

The Galibier was the largest body in the Type 57 range. The claims are precise and in the correct order.

Bugatti Type 57 Modeles 1939 Brochure Cabriolet Stelvio - Aravis Cabriolet Stelvio 4 Places Cariolet Aravis 2-3 Places

Bugatti Type 57 Modèles 1939. Cabriolet Stelvio 3 places. Cabriolet Aravis 2-3 places.

Two open bodies on the same page, the Stelvio and the Aravis distinguished by seating capacity and hood treatment.

The mountain names were Jean's choice — the Stelvio Pass, the Col de l'Aravis. He named his cars after roads worth driving.

Carrosserie Gangloff, 1935

Before Jean's body designs became the standard, Bugatti's principal coachbuilder was Carrosserie Gangloff in Colmar, Alsace.
The 1935 Gangloff catalog documents six Type 57 and 57SC body variants — the Coach Aérodynamique, the Cabriolet, the Roadster, the Double Cabriolet, the Coach, the Faux Cabriolet. The photography is monochrome and functional. The cars do not need flattery.

Carrosserie Gangloff, Colmar for Bugatti. The cover of the 1935 catalog.

Carrosserie Gangloff, Colmar. Cover of the 1935 catalog for the Bugatti Type 57.

Gangloff of Colmar was Bugatti's principal coachbuilder before Jean's body designs became the standard.
The 1935 catalog documented what was available before the Atalante, the Atlantic, and the Stelvio existed. A world about to be replaced.

Carrosserie Gangloff, Colmar for Bugatti. Six monochrome pages from the 1935 catalog. Coach Aérodynamique 757 G, Cabriolet 357 G, Roasdster 557 G, Double Cabriolet 147 G, Coach 257G, Faux Cabriolet 657 G.

Carrosserie Gangloff, Colmar — Six pages from the 1935 catalog: Coach Aérodynamique 757G, Cabriolet 357G, Roadster 557G, Double Cabriolet 147G, Coach 257G, Faux Cabriolet 657G.

Six body variants, each assigned a Gangloff reference number.

The Coach Aérodynamique — 757G — was the most forward-looking of the six, the one that acknowledged where design was heading. Within two years, Jean had taken it further than Gangloff had imagined.

The Trains

In the early 1930s, Bugatti faced a financial crisis serious enough that the company's accountant presented the only rational solution: reduce the workforce by at least a third.

Ettore did not respond. He disappeared for a week.

When he came back, he gathered the entire workforce and told them to move all equipment into the smaller building. When they asked why, the answer was short: they would build trains.

In that week alone he had already designed the program. Within two years, the Bugatti Autorail existed: a streamlined railcar unlike anything running on European tracks. Ettore designed ergonomic seats that reversed direction so passengers always faced forward, with fold-out tables built into the backrest. To power the locomotives he used four modified engines from the Type 41 Royale — 12,763cc each, the largest production car engine ever built, now repurposed for rail.

The Autorail set the world rail speed record: 196 km/h, electrically timed over 10 kilometres. The previous record was around 122. He didn't improve it. He erased it.

The French national railway bought the trains. Nobody was let go.

The brochure that documents all of this is printed in blue monochrome — the same controlled hand as every other piece of Bugatti literature. At the bottom, three words: Vitesse. Confort. Sécurité. Not a promise. A statement of fact from a man who had just proved all three.

Carrosserie Gangloff, Colmar for Bugatti. Six monochrome pages from the 1935 catalog. Coach Aérodynamique 757 G, Cabriolet 357 G, Roasdster 557 G, Double Cabriolet 147 G, Coach 257G, Faux Cabriolet 657 G.

Automotive rapides Bugatti — Vitesse — Confort - Sécurité.
Advertisement Sheet 1934.

Record du monde de vitesse sur rail — 196 Kilomètres a l'heure — Chronométreé électriquement sur 10 kilomètres.
October 24, 1934.

Copyright, Links And Credits

Photography, Copyright & Credits

These images are part of the Ikonographia Visual Archives: — Bugatti Heritage Collection —  Bugatti Factory Drawings  Archive.
All drawings reproduced by Roberto Bigano in 1990 from originals held in the Bugatti factory archive. The current location of the originals is unknown.
All photographs © Ikonographia / Roberto Bigano — All Rights Reserved.

Terms of Use (Summary)

The images presented in this archive are copyrighted and available for licensed use only through Ikonographia Visual Archives.

You may not download, reproduce, publish, or distribute these images without a valid license. For commercial or editorial licensing, please refer to the product pages or contact Ikonographia directly. A full explanation of licensing terms is available in the Shop / Licensing Information section under "Ikonographia — Standard License" and "Ikonographia — Merchandising & Product Use Licenses"

The Ikonographia Bugatti Heritage Archive

Between 1990 and 2009, photographer Roberto Bigano documented Bugatti with a level of access that no longer exists and cannot be replicated. The relationship began with Romano Artioli — the Italian entrepreneur who had just acquired the Bugatti name and was preparing its revival at Campogalliano — who gave Roberto carte blanche to work inside the factory, the archive, and every event that followed. No brief. No restrictions. No supervision.

What resulted is not a single project but five distinct bodies of work: the factory technical drawings reproduced before they disappeared, two major photographic commissions on the historic cars, a complete documentary record of the Bugatti International Centenary Meeting in Tuscany, and an Alsatian reportage made inside Molsheim before the restoration began. Together they form one of the most complete private archives of Bugatti heritage in existence — most of it unpublished until now, some of it available nowhere else.

The archive is not a celebration of the marque. It is a record made by someone who was trusted enough to be inside it, at the precise moment when its past and its future were in the same room.

Credits & Acknowledgments

Ikonographia gratefully acknowledges the fundamental contribution of Romano Artioli, founder of Bugatti Automobili, without whose trust and unrestricted access this archive would not exist.

Ikonographia Mission Statement

Ikonographia is committed to the accurate documentation, preservation, and ethical dissemination of twentieth-century visual culture.

Archival Notes

These drawings were reproduced by Roberto Bigano in 1990, during the preparation for the revival of Bugatti Automobili at Campogalliano. Access to the Bugatti factory archive was granted by Romano Artioli. The drawings document the original Molsheim factory production.

Further Reading (Selected Sources)

Bugatti Masterpieces of 1920s and 1930s. By Roberto Bigano

Bugatti Masterpieces of 1920s and 1930s. By Roberto Bigano

Bugatti Masterpieces of 1920s and 1930s. By Roberto Bigano

Two sessions, two decades apart — the museum and the meeting.

Vintage Bugatti masterpieces photographed by Roberto Bigano across two sessions. The iconic Atalante and Atlantic from the Divina Bugatti sessions at the Musée National de l'Automobile in Mulhouse — the FMR commission. The legendary Type 13, Type 35, and Type 40A from the Bugatti Glamour Sessions — four nights of open-air studio photography during the Centenary celebrations in Tuscany, with the owners present — two bodies of work. Available nowhere else.

Bugatti Type 37A, "Flighty" (1928) - Owners, Frederica and Simon Fitzpatrick, Guernsey © Roberto Bigano/ ikonographoa.com Browse the Bugatti Archive https://www.ikonographia.com/archive/the-bugatti-archive/

Bugatti Type 37A, "Flighty" (1928) - Owners Frederica and Simon Fitzpatrick, Guernsey.

Bugatti Masterpieces. A gallery of the most iconic models.


Ikonographia is proud to showcase a gallery of the most iconic vintage Bugatti models, highlighted by the splendid images of Roberto Bigano. The models range from the legendary Type 13 and Type 35 racing models to the stylish Type 57 Atalante and Atlantic designed by Jean Bugatti.
All the images are available in high-resolution or fine-art prints.
This is a work-in-progess page. We are going to add more contents. Please stay in touch.

A 1937 Bugatti Type 57SC Coupé Atlantic lightened in silhouette mode to emphasize the flowing coupé lines

A 1937 Bugatti Type 57SC Coupé Atlantic. Detail of the windshield and wipers emphasizing the riveted crest.
Jean Bugatti designed the half-body ending in a crest. He then reverted the first part right-left and finally joined the two pieces with rivets in one of the most daring automotive designs. Courtesy: British Garage, Paris.

About Ettore and Jean Bugatti.


Automobiles Ettore Bugatti was a French car manufacturer of high-performance cars, founded in 1909 in Molsheim, Alsace, France, by the Italian industrial designer Ettore Bugatti. The firm produced about 8,000 cars and is known for its design beauty and many race victories.

Ettore Bugatti himself designed his creations (together with his highly talented son Jean, who later took to the drawing board alone). This extraordinary man had attended the Brera School of Art as a youth, yielding an artistic streak inherited from his father, Carlo (a fine cabinet-maker). The founding genius of the Bugatti firm also demonstrated an astonishing ability for mechanical engineering and an amazingly eclectic mind in general.

This flair had also gone to his brother Rembrandt, the talented sculptor whose works include the little elephant triumphing on the Royale’s bonnet. 

The legendary Ettore Bugatti's signature on the engine head of a 1921 Type 13 Brescia. Photo by Roberto Bigano. Buy this image in the ikonographia.com store.

The legendary Ettore Bugatti's signature on the engine head of a 1921 Type 13 Brescia.

A gallery of Masterpieces. Let's start with the Type 13 Brescia.


The Bugatti Type 13, Brescia, was the first actual Bugatti produced from 1910 to 1926. Thanks to the race victories, Bugatti became known as pur-sang (thoroughbred), keeping with Ettore Bugatti's feelings for his designs.
The Bugatti Type 13, Brescia, was fast and technically superior, making it virtually unbeatable. This was evident in the 1921 Brescia Grand Prix, where Bugatti's cars finished in the top four places, sparking a surge in orders. With the introduction of the "Brescia," Ettore Bugatti fundamentally changed the racing scene, as his cars won almost every competition they entered in the 1920s, cementing their place in racing history.

The initial Brescia featured a basic, functional design so rudimentary and simplistic that it earned the nickname "Bagnoire" (bathtub), a term reflecting its unique shape and design.
The Brescia design was later refined, as evidenced by the exquisite yellow sample below.

Bugatti Type 13 Brescia, 1921. Photo by Roberto Bigano. Buy this image at https://www.ikonographia.com/archive/the-bugatti-archive/

Bugatti Type 13 Brescia Cabriolet, 1923.

The Bugatti Type 35.


The Bugatti Type 35 is an iconic race car design produced between 1924 and 1930. It was phenomenally successful, winning over 1,000 races in its time. In 1926, it took the Grand Prix World Championship after winning 351 races and setting 47 records in the two prior years.

At its height, the Type 35 averaged 14 weekly race wins, including the prestigious Targa Florio for five consecutive years, from 1925 through 1929.

Bugatti Type 35B Grand Prix Biplace Course - Two Seater Racing

Bugatti Type 35B Grand Prix Biplace Course Two-Seater Racing 1927.
The Type 35 is an iconic race car design produced between 1924 and 1930. It was phenomenally successful, winning over 1,000 races in its time. At its height, the Type 35 averaged 14 weekly race wins, including the prestigious Targa Florio for five consecutive years, from 1925 through 1929.

Dashboard of a Bugatti Type 35B Grand-Prix (1927) - Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse

The dashboard of a Bugatti Type 35B Grand-Prix (1927) – Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse.

Bugatti Type 35A, 1926. Owned by Gigi Baulino & Enrica Varese. © Roberto Bigano/ ikonographoa.com Browse the Bugatti Archive https://www.ikonographia.com/archive/the-bugatti-archive/

Bugatti Type 35A, 1926. Owners Gigi Baulino & Enrica Varese, Italy. Picture taken at Bugatti International Meeting 2009. Hasselblad 39 Multishot Camera High-resolution file.
The owner forbade the photographer from washing the car so as not to erase the dirt from the race, which made it fascinating.
Watch the video of this event >

The Bugatti Type 41 Royale.


The Bugatti Type 41 Royale was gorgeous in its seven-meter length. It was enormous, had the most oversized wheels, and was the longest and tallest limo. Her design and form would smoothly conceal the captivating exuberance of an eight-cylinder motor for an impressive 12,773 cubic meters capacity that defines once and for all the original idea of a car.

Only seven Royales were produced. We showcase the "Coupè Napoleon," Ettore Bugatti's car, and the Bugatti Type 41 Esders Roadster, probably the most elegant.

Bugatti Type 41 Royale Coupé Napoleon (1929) The personal car of Ettore Bugatti. Courtesy: Musée National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse. Photo by Roberto Bigano. Courtesy: Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse. Buy this image at Ikonographia.com store

Bugatti Type 41 Royale Coupé Napoleon (1929), the personal car of Ettore Bugatti. On top of the radiator grill is the symbol of the Royales, the Elephant carved by Rembrandt Bugatti. Courtesy: Museé National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse.

The Bugatti Royale's Prancing Elephant, according to Antonio Tabucchi.


There has never been such an expensive car. Only seven Bugatti Royale were built, each one different. Upon the radiator grill, the Royale and the Petit Royale had a prancing elephant carved by Rembrandt Bugatti, Ettore's brother, as a symbol.  You can find it described in Rebus, a short tale by Antonio Tabucchi. Here is an excerpt.

The Bugatti Royale, according to Antonio Tabucchi.

It really was a Bugatti Royale, a Coupé de Ville; I don't know if that means anything to you, Monsieur […] Albert couldn't believe his eyes. It's not possible; it's not possible, he repeated to himself while stroking the long-tempered bumpers.

I don't know if you understand, but a Bugatti gives one the idea of a woman's body lying down on her back with her legs forward […] The elephant was missing from the bonnet. That was the only awful surprise. Maybe you may not know, or perhaps you just haven't noticed, that Bugatti had a figurine of a silver statue of an elephant on the bonnet, right on top of the radiator grill. It was a sculpture by Ettore's brother, Rembrandt Bugatti. It wasn't only a trademark, like the Rolls Royce Winged Victory of Samothrace or the Packard's Swan, but a tangible symbol to be deciphered like every other symbol. It was an elephant standing on his back legs, with the erect trunk symbolizing aggression and coupling.

Does it seem too easy to explain? Perhaps. But think about it: a Bugatti Royale lying on its back, going slowly uphill, wings spread open, ready to speed up, ready for the thrill, with that fabulous radiator grill protecting its pulsating life and energy, and on the top an elephant with an erect trunk.
Excerpt from the short story "Rebus" in "Little Misunderstandings of No Importance" "(Piccoli equivoci senza importanza), by Antonio Tabucchi.

Leggi il testo originale italiano.

"Rebus." Da "Piccoli equivoci senza importanza."


“Era proprio una Bugatti Royale, un coupé de ville, non so se a lei dice qualcosa, Monsieur (...) Albert non credeva ai suoi occhi, non è possibile, ripeteva, non è possibile, e accarezzava i parafanghi affusolati e lunghi, non so se lei riesce a capire, ma nella Bugatti c'è l'idea del corpo femminile, una donna, appoggiata sulla schiena con le gambe in avanti (...)

Mancava l'elefante sul cofano, fu l'unica brutta sorpresa (...) Forse lei non lo sa, o non ci ha mai fatto caso, ma la Bugatti aveva sul cofano, proprio all'apice della volta della griglia, la statuetta d'argento di un elefante. Era una scultura del fratello di Ettore, Rembrandt Bugatti, e non era solo un marchio della casa, come la vittoria alata della Rolls o il cigno della Packard, quello era un vero simbolo, misterioso da decifrare come tutti i simboli, era un elefante in piedi sulle zampe posteriori e la proboscide eretta in un barrito di aggressione o di accoppiamento.

The Elephant carved by Rembrandt Bugatti, right on top of the radiator grill of the Type 41 Royale Coupé Napoleon, the personal car of Ettore Bugatti. It was an elephant standing on his back legs, with the erect trunk as a symbol of aggression and coupling (1929) - Courtesy: Musée National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse

The Elephant by Rembrandt Bugatti, right on top of the radiator grill of the Type 41 Royale Coupé Napoleon, the personal car of Ettore Bugatti (1929). It was the symbol of the Royales. 

Bugatti Type 55 Sport Roadster and Coupé


The Type 55 was introduced at the 1931 Paris Motor Show. It was produced until 1935 in 38 samples, Roadster and Coupé, most of which had factory bodywork elegantly designed by Jean Bugatti.
Like many high-end automakers, Bugatti used its success in competition to promote its road cars. This already happened with the Type 13 Brescia and the Type 35.
The Type 55 was a direct descendant of the Type 51 race car and was similarly powered by a supercharged 2.3-litre dual-overhead-cam inline-eight.

We showcase here two pictures of the Roadster and Coupé, with the classic factory bodywork by Jean Bugatti.

Bugatti Type 55 Sport Roadster 1932. Road version of the Type 51 Grand Prix, produced in 38 smaples from 1932 to 1935.

Bugatti Type 55 Roadster, as designed by Jean Bugatti.  Courtesy: Museé National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse.

Bugatti Type 55 Sport Coupe 1932. Road version of the Type 51 Grand Prix, produced in 38 smaples from 1932 to 1935.

Bugatti Type 55 Coupé, as designed by Jean Bugatti.  Courtesy: Museé National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse.

Bugatti Type 59-50B Grand Prix Monoplace Course - Single Seater 1938 - Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse

Bugatti Type 59-50B Grand Prix Monoplace Course - Single Seater 1938

Divina Bugatti. A Timeless Legend Celebrated in a Timeless Book

Divina Bugatti. A Timeless Legend Celebrated in a Timeless Book

Divina Bugatti. A Timeless Legend Celebrated in a Timeless Book

Franco Maria Ricci's most celebrated automotive book — photographed by Roberto Bigano at the Musée National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse, 1991.

In 1991, Franco Maria Ricci — the publisher Fellini called "La Perla Nera" — commissioned Roberto Bigano to photograph the historic Bugatti collection at the Musée National de l'Automobile in Mulhouse. The pictures were taken over six nights, with a 4×5 view camera, in a closed museum. Two editions of 5,000 copies each. Both sold out.

The cover of the book Divina Bugatti, Storia di un capolavoro meccanico published in 1991 by Franco Maria Ricci, with photographs by Roberto Bigano.

Divina Bugatti's Story. Characters and Background.

We will tell you the story of the book "Divina Bugatti." It was created as a joint effort between Romano Artioli, owner of Bugatti Automobili, and Franco Maria Ricci, a legendary Italian publisher—the photographs by Roberto Bigano. Before we begin, let us introduce the characters and put them in context.

Automobiles Ettore Bugatti was a French high-performance car manufacturer founded in 1909 in Molsheim, Alsace, France, by the Italian industrial designer Ettore Bugatti. The firm produced about 8,000 cars and is known for its design beauty and many race victories.

Romano Artioli is an Italian visionary entrepreneur who bought the Bugatti brand in 1987 and revived it in Campogalliano, Modena, as a builder of its time's fastest series-production car. Bugatti Automobili produced a total of 128 cars. Read all the stories here.

Franco Maria Ricci was one of the most refined editors the world had ever seen. His iconic Magazine, FMR, and splendid books are still a reference. However, FMR was also an often unattainable goal for any photographer. Laura Casalis, Franco Maria Ricci's widow, recently relaunched the FMR magazine and Publishing House with outstanding publications.

Roberto Bigano was Bugatti's photographer at the beginning of the 1990s, documenting the birth of the new Bugatti. Roberto will introduce us to the fascinating vintage Bugatti world.

Bugatti Type 57SC Coupè Atalante (1937) in two lighting modes

Use the arrows or tap on devices to see the two versions. Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse.

Roberto Bigano and Divina Bugatti

Let Roberto Bigano tell us how the Divina Bugatti book project started and went through.

"In 1991, I was working for Bugatti Automobili. One day, the refined publisher Franco Maria Ricci, who already desired to celebrate the myth of the Bugatti, suggested the idea of a book on the legendary brand to Romano Artioli, the Bugatti company owner. They reached an agreement, and the plan went through. Naturally, Artioli mentioned "the best photographer in the world" to Ricci, encouraging my candidacy for the job. Ricci, as expected, was skeptical. "I have my photographers, ones I trust," he said with a half smile. The persistence of Artioli gained me a meeting with Ricci. "Go and take a few shots; we'll see," he said to get rid of me."
From Roberto Bigano's "1976-1992. A very serious, semi-serious biography."

Dashboard of a Bugatti Type 35B Grand-Prix (1927). Photo by Roberto Bigano. Courtesy: Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse. Buy this image at Ikonographia.com store

Dashboard of a Bugatti Type 35B Grand-Prix (1927).

Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse.

Roberto Bigano and Divina Bugatti

I felt well-equipped for my departure—one hundred forty-five different accessories packed in the trunk of my station wagon. For months, I had been working on how to build a mobile set around a Bugatti on location. Before violating that holy ground, I carried out a test: I photographed a Lancia Thema in a large shed. It worked, so I decided to go ahead.

Upon arriving at the National Automobile Museum of Mulhouse in Alsace, I embarked on my nocturnal marathon. Cloaked in the atmosphere of suspense, in the eery silence, I came face to face with The Divine. The situation reminded me of one of Hemingway's stories: the bull and the lion, still before the charge. I was almost worried that the steel muscles would explode, at any time, in all their power, and the beast within would run me over like a train. I had an emotional outburst; I felt as if I were running a fever. Like a robot, I kept shooting and opening Polaroids. I looked at her, but I could not see inside her. Fatigue and tension made everything even more dramatic. "What am I doing here in France, in the middle of the night, in a dark museum? Why didn't I stay home?" I started thinking.
From Roberto Bigano's "1976-1992. A very serious, semi-serious biography."

The Turning Point Polaroid at Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse. Bugatti Type 35B Sport Two-seater, US Coachwork (1927).

The "Turning Point" Polaroid

Suddenly, I had reached the turning point: I opened yet another Polaroid, but this time, I found the courage to look at it with a photographer’s eye. I had recognized her, THE Bugatti, in all her dazzling beauty. “I am yours. Only you will be able to possess me,” she was saying. I started dancing as if I was in the middle of the Rio de Janeiro carnival parade. I didn’t feel tired anymore. “I’ve done it!” I said, my voice echoing in the empty museum.
I’d finally gotten a hold of the situation. I’d jumped on the wild horse and was riding as a Native American would.
From Roberto Bigano's "1976-1992. A very serious, semi-serious biography."

The Backstage for Divina Bugatti. Musée National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse, Alsace, France. June 1991. Photo by Roberto Bigano. Buy this image at Ikonographia.com store

The Backstage for Divina Bugatti — Musée National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse, Alsace, France — June 1991.

All the pictures were taken with a 4x5 Plaubel Wiew Camera, Makro Sironar 300mm lens, and Ektachrome Professional film.

The Presentation at Franco Maria Ricci.

I arrived at Franco Maria Ricci’s, feeling confident and appearing as cold-blooded as a contract killer. I knew I was in the presence of one of the most refined editors the world had ever seen. Still, I also knew that I could not fail: if he had any taste at all – and it could not be otherwise – he could not still be indifferent after seeing my work.

Ricci received me with a gentler than polite smile, the smile you would give a child showing you their drawing. His expression changed and suddenly brightened after his eyes settled on the first transparency. “But they are… lit!” he whispered to himself. “Of course they are! Did you think I would bring you the dark ones?” I answered in a friendly yet amused manner. It felt like I was watching from the outside as if I were the spectator to a film. Franco Maria Ricci picked up the phone. “Come and look at something sensational!” he said, running down the corridor enthusiastically. “Call the others and tell them to come to my office!” He looked at me excitedly in front of all his associates, as if I were a superhero, and offered me some incredible projects: on Spanish baroque style, on medieval armor, on the town of Parma, and on French cabinet-makers. He had just assigned me all his future projects.
I had managed to impress Franco Maria Ricci, the king of aesthetics!
From Roberto Bigano's "1976-1992. A very serious, semi-serious biography."

Backstage at Museé National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse. Bugatti Type 41 Royale Coupé Napoleon (1929) The personal car of Ettore Bugatti.

The Backstage for Divina Bugatti — Musée National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse, Alsace, France — June 1991.

All the pictures of the Royale were taken at night in this set, which was highly problematic. The Royale was 7.2m / 24 feet and was very difficult to lighten.

Selected pictures from the book

Selected images from the book — The most iconic Bugattis, documented under the most demanding editorial standards in the world.

Bugatti Type 41 Royale Coupé Napoléon, 1929 — bonnet detail with Rembrandt Bugatti elephant mascot. Photographed by Roberto Bigano at the Musée National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse.

Bugatti Type 41 Royale Coupé Napoléon — Bonnet and Rampant Elephant, 1929

The personal car of Ettore Bugatti. Engine: 12,763 cc. Photographed for Divina Bugatti — Franco Maria Ricci's most celebrated automotive book.

Ricci's rule was absolute: no non-orthogonal images. His response: "We never publish this kind of photograph, but this image is so beautiful that I must. Please don't do it again." The world's most demanding publisher broke his own rule for this picture.

The Elephant carved by Rembrandt Bugatti, right on top of the radiator grill of the Type 41 Royale Coupé Napoleon, the personal car of Ettore Bugatti. It was an elephant standing on his back legs, with the erect trunk as a symbol of aggression and coupling (1929) - Courtesy: Musée National de l'Automobile, Mulhouse. Photo by Roberto Bigano. Courtesy: Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse. Buy this image at Ikonographia.com store

The Elephant carved by Rembrandt Bugatti placed atop the radiator grill of Ettore Bugatti's Type x41 Royale Coupé Napoleon.

An elephant standing on its back legs, with the erect trunk symbolizing aggression and coupling (1929).

A 1937 Bugatti Type 57SC Coupé Atlantic. Detail of the windshield and wipers emphasizing the riveted crest. Jean Bugatti designed the half-body ending in a crest. He then reverted the first part right-left and finally joined the two pieces with rivets in one of the most daring automotive designs. Photo by Roberto Bigano. Courtesy: British Garage, Paris. Buy this image at Ikonographia.com store

Bugatti Type 57SC Coupé Atlantic — 1937

Detail of the windshield and wipers emphasizing the riveted crest. Jean Bugatti designed the half-body ending in a crest. He then reverted the first part right-left and finally joined the two pieces with rivets in one of the most daring automotive designs.

Bugatti Type 32 Biplace Course "Tank" (1923). This striking, unexpected rear view emphasizes the aerodynamics of the design. Photo by Roberto Bigano. Courtesy: Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse. Buy this image at Ikonographia.com store

Bugatti Type 32 Biplace Course "Tank" — Rear view, 1923.

One of the first racing cars designed around aerodynamic principles — the body enclosing the wheels, the silhouette a single uninterrupted form.

This rear view reveals the engineering logic: everything hidden, everything intentional. Among the first racing cars to use four-wheel braking.

Bugatti Type 35B Sport Two-seater, US Coachwork (1927). Photo by Roberto Bigano. Courtesy: Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse. Buy this image at Ikonographia.com store

Bugatti Type 35B Sport Two-seater, US Coachwork — Rear view, 1927.

Purists consider the American coachwork a deviation from the original design.

Bugatti Type 59-50B Grand Prix Monoplace Course - Single Seater 1938 - Courtesy: Musée National de l’Automobile Mulhouse

Bugatti Type 59-50B Grand Prix Monoplace Course — Single Seater, 1938

The last racing Bugatti.

The very first EB110 model made in epowood as designed by Benedini, with the rear wheels covered reminding the Bugatti Atlantic. Photo Roberto Bigano. Buy this image in the ikonographia.com store.

The First Epowood Model of Bugatti EB110 — Unveiled in Divina Bugatti.

The early EB110 epowood maquette produced during the 1991 restyling phase led by architect Gianpaolo Benedini. The model introduces the covered rear wheels, a deliberate reference to the Bugatti Atlantic and Aérolithe, reconnecting the modern EB110 project to the marque’s most radical pre-war designs and marking a decisive step toward the final EB110 GT.

Divina Bugatti. Storia di un capolavoro meccanico. Divine Bugatti. Histoire d'un chef dœvre de la mécanique. Franco Maria Ricci Editore 1991.

DIVINA BUGATTI — Storia di un capolavoro meccanico

Divina Bugatti. Storia di un capolavoro meccanico.
Divine Bugatti. Histoire d'un chef dœuvre de la mécanique.
Franco Maria Ricci Editore 1991.
Photographs by Roberto Bigano.
Texts by Giuseppe Maghenzani, Ivo Ceci, Norbert Steinhauser, Paul Kestler.

204 pages.
72 color prints on matte-coated paper.
15 hand-applied color plates.
29 reproductions 30 x 30 cm.
Luxury Fabriano blue-laid paper.
Black "Orient" silk binding with gold impressions.
Circulation of Italian Edition, 5000 numbered copies.
Circulation of French Edition, 5000 numbered copies.

Copyright, Links And Credits

Photography, Copyright & Credits

These images are part of the Ikonographia Visual Archives: — Bugatti Heritage Collection —  Bugatti Factory Drawings  Archive.
All drawings reproduced by Roberto Bigano in 1990 from originals held in the Bugatti factory archive. The current location of the originals is unknown.
All photographs © Ikonographia / Roberto Bigano — All Rights Reserved.

Terms of Use (Summary)

The images presented in this archive are copyrighted and available for licensed use only through Ikonographia Visual Archives.

You may not download, reproduce, publish, or distribute these images without a valid license. For commercial or editorial licensing, please refer to the product pages or contact Ikonographia directly. A full explanation of licensing terms is available in the Shop / Licensing Information section under "Ikonographia — Standard License" and "Ikonographia — Merchandising & Product Use Licenses"

The Ikonographia Bugatti Heritage Archive

Between 1990 and 2009, photographer Roberto Bigano documented Bugatti with a level of access that no longer exists and cannot be replicated. The relationship began with Romano Artioli — the Italian entrepreneur who had just acquired the Bugatti name and was preparing its revival at Campogalliano — who gave Roberto carte blanche to work inside the factory, the archive, and every event that followed. No brief. No restrictions. No supervision.

What resulted is not a single project but five distinct bodies of work: the factory technical drawings reproduced before they disappeared, two major photographic commissions on the historic cars, a complete documentary record of the Bugatti International Centenary Meeting in Tuscany, and an Alsatian reportage made inside Molsheim before the restoration began. Together they form one of the most complete private archives of Bugatti heritage in existence — most of it unpublished until now, some of it available nowhere else.

The archive is not a celebration of the marque. It is a record made by someone who was trusted enough to be inside it, at the precise moment when its past and its future were in the same room.

Credits & Acknowledgments

Ikonographia gratefully acknowledges the fundamental contribution of Romano Artioli, founder of Bugatti Automobili, without whose trust and unrestricted access this archive would not exist.

Ikonographia Mission Statement

Ikonographia is committed to the accurate documentation, preservation, and ethical dissemination of twentieth-century visual culture.

Archival Notes

These drawings were reproduced by Roberto Bigano in 1990, during the preparation for the revival of Bugatti Automobili at Campogalliano. Access to the Bugatti factory archive was granted by Romano Artioli. The drawings document the original Molsheim factory production.

Further Reading (Selected Sources)

Bugatti Posters

Bugatti Posters

Bugatti Posters

Cassandre, Dudovich, Vincent, Geo Ham — the finest graphic artists of the era, commissioned by Bugatti.

Bugatti commissioned its advertising posters from the finest graphic artists of the era — Cassandre, Marcello Dudovich, René Vincent, Geo Ham. The results are among the most celebrated works in automotive poster art. Cassandre's 1935 Le Pur-Sang des Automobiles remains the definitive image of the marque. Dudovich's 1922 C'è una Bugatti, non si passa is a masterpiece of symbolic compression.

The originals were held in the Campogalliano archive. Roberto Bigano borrowed and reproduced them in his studio — the same access that produced the factory drawings. The archive presents the most significant surviving examples, reproduced directly from the originals.

Bugatti Le Pur-Sang Des Automobiles. Art by Cassandre 1935

Obsessive attention to detail and hiring the best artists.


Ettore Bugatti designed many of his creations, as did his highly talented son Jean, who later took to the drawing board alone. This extraordinary man had attended the Brera School of Art as a youth, yielding an artistic streak.
He also demonstrated an astonishing ability for mechanical engineering and an amazingly eclectic mind in general. At the age of 20, he built his first car and personally designed everything from the “ergonomic” interiors of his company’s automobiles.
Consequently, Ettore and Jean designed and oversaw Bugatti’s literature (catalogs, advertisements, posters, and factory technical drawings).
The posters were created by great artists of the time, including Cassandre, Marcello Dudovitch, Renè Vincent, Geo Ham, and others.

C’è una Bugatti, non si passa (There's a Bugatti, you can't pass.) Poster by Marcello Dudovich 1922 Dimensions: 195x140 cm Printer: Edizioni STAR . Officine IGAP, Milano This masterpiece is rich in symbolism, beginning with the title that emphasizes Bugatti's legendary invincibility. The model portrayed is the Type 13 Brescia.

C’è una Bugatti, non si passa (There's a Bugatti, you can't pass.) 1922.
A Poster by Marcello Dudovich.

Dimensions: 195x140 cm
Printer: Edizioni STAR . Officine IGAP, Milan

This masterpiece is rich in symbolism, beginning with the title emphasizing Bugatti's legendary invincibility. The model portrayed is the Type 13 Brescia.

Apparently, there is a reference to Isadora Duncan, who died when her red scarf became entangled in the wheel of a Bugatti. But this is not possible, as this happened five years later.

1930 Bugatti Poster by René Vincent

Bugatti. 1930
A Poster by René Vincent

An impacting 1932 Bugatti Poster by Gerold

Bugatti Type 50 1932.
Artwork by Gerold.
Poster size: 51 x 35in / 129 x 90cm

Published by A.Trüb & Cie, Aarau, Switzerland

Le Pur-Sang Des Automobiles. Art by Cassandre 1935. An iconic 1935 Bugatti Poster by Cassandre, pseudonym of Adolphe Jean-Marie Mouron.

Le Pur-Sang Des Automobiles. 1935
An iconic 1935 Bugatti Poster by Cassandre, pseudonym of Adolphe Jean-Marie Mouron.

Bugatti Automobiles et Autorails. 1935 - Art by R.Geri

Bugatti Automobiles et Autorails. 1935.

Art by R.Geri
Poster size: 38 x 23in. / 97 x 59cm.

Bugatti Type 57 Modeles 1939

Bugatti Type 57 Modeles 1939.

EUR Euro