Josef Albers
(Bottrop 1888 - 1976 New Haven/Connecticut)
"Formulation : Articulation"
Zweibändiges Mappenwerk mit jeweils 33 Siebdrucken 1972
40 x 53,5 cm
num.
Auflage 1000 Exemplare
Danilowitz Appendix C
[25176]
We cordially invite you to a virtual tour of our exhibition "JOSEF ALBERS - "Interaction of Color":
Josef Albers
(Bottrop 1888 - 1976 New Haven/Connecticut)
"Formulation : Articulation"
Zweibändiges Mappenwerk mit jeweils 33 Siebdrucken 1972
40 x 53,5 cm
num.
Auflage 1000 Exemplare
Danilowitz Appendix C
[25176]
Josef Albers
(Bottrop 1888 - 1976 New Haven/Connecticut)
"Embossed linear constructions (ELC)"
(geprägte lineare Konstruktionen)
Mappenwerk mit 8 Blindprägedrucken 1969
70 x 54 cm x 4 cm, Pr. 20,7 x 46 cm
sign. num. dat. bet.
Auflage 116 Exemplare
Danilowitz 186.1 - 186.8
[21419]
Josef Albers
(Bottrop 1888 - 1976 New Haven/Connecticut)
"SP I"
aus Portfolio "SP"
Farbsiebdruck 1967
61,3 x 61,3 cm, Abb. 49,5 x 49,5 cm
sign. num. dat. bet.
Auflage 139 Exemplare
Danilowitz 175.1
[25749]
Josef Albers
(Bottrop 1888 - 1976 New Haven/Connecticut)
"SP VI"
aus Portfolio "SP"
Farbsiebdruck 1967
61,4 x 61,4 cm, Abb. 49,8 x 49,8 cm
sign. num. dat. bez. bet.
Auflage 137 Exemplare
Danilowitz 175.6
[21914]
Josef Albers
(Bottrop 1888 - 1976 New Haven/Connecticut)
"SP XII"
aus Portfolio "SP"
Farbsiebdruck 1967
61,3 x 61,3 cm, Abb. 49,5 x 49,5 cm
sign. num. dat. bet.
Auflage 139 Exemplare
Danilowitz 175.12
[25758]
Josef Albers
(Bottrop 1888 - 1976 New Haven/Connecticut)
"I-S e"
Farbsiebdruck 1970
54,6 x 54,6 cm, Abb. 34,9 x 34,9 cm
sign. num. dat. bet.
Auflage 125 Exemplare
Danilowitz 194
[22773]
Josef Albers
(Bottrop 1888 - 1976 New Haven/Connecticut)
Blatt 5 aus "Hommage au carré"
Farbsiebdruck 1964/1965
48,3 x 38,1 cm, Abb. 27,9 x 27,9 cm
sign. num. dat.
Auflage 125 Exemplare
Danilowitz 160.5
[24094]
Josef Albers
(Bottrop 1888 - 1976 New Haven/Connecticut)
"Pompeian"
Farbsiebdruck 1965
43,2 x 43,2 cm, Abb. 27,9 x 27,9 cm
sign. num. dat. bet.
Auflage 150 Exemplare
Danilowitz 161
[22867]
Josef Albers
(Bottrop 1888 - 1976 New Haven/Connecticut)
Poster zu den Olympischen Spielen München 1972
Farbsiebdruck (Poster) 1970
108,4 x 70,8 cm, Abb. 83,8 x 61 cm
sign. dat. bez.
Auflage 213 Exemplare
Danilowitz 213
[25830]
Josef Albers (Bottrop 18881976 New Haven, Connecticut), explored the artistic dimension of colour and the relationship of colours to each other. Around 1950, he found the ideal form for colour in the square.
Following his academic training in Berlin, Essen and Munich, he began studying at the Bauhaus in Weimar in 1920 and took on a teaching position there in 1923. In 1932, when Mies van der Rohe was named head of the Bauhaus, Albers became his deputy. When the Bauhaus was closed by the National Socialists in 1933, he was appointed to the Black Mountain College in Ashville, North Carolina and moved to the USA with his wife, the famous Bauhaus weaver Anni Albers. The move to the United States marked the beginning of a new period in the artists career.
Albers experimented with the interaction of colours, forms, lines and surfaces and found in colour a comprehensive artistic means that was capable of expressing everything.
His famous series Homage to the Square was the result of his reflections on theories of perception, which Albers formulated in numerous writings and interviews. The individual works from this series consist of ostensibly superimposed squares of different colours and colour nuances. Here, Albers deals with the interaction of the colours with each other, which can infinitely change their effect through mere juxtaposition.
In his work, Albers was both a painter and a philosopher of colours. As a teacher as well as an artist, he was ground-breaking for an entire generation of American artists. Op Art, Kinetic Art, Colour Field Painting, New Abstraction and Minimal Art were all influenced by his work.
Josef Albers participated in the first and fourth documenta exhibitions in 1955 and 1968; he was awarded altogether fourteen honorary doctorate degrees; in 1968, he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and in 1973 to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 1968, he was also awarded the Grand Cross of Merit of the Order Pour le Mérite. In 1971, he was the first living artist to be honoured with a retrospective at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. That same year, he and his wife established The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation, a non-profit organization aimed at furthering the revelation and evocation of vision through art.