Flickr Widget

Showing posts with label Anni Albers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anni Albers. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Anni Albers

Anni Albers (1899-1994) (born Annelise Fleischmann) was a German textile designer, weaver, writer and printmaker. She grew up in an affluent home and had studied art as a child, but she was expected to live a traditional domestic life as her mother had done. She rebelled and chose to pursue an education in art at the Bauhaus, where she became a student in 1922.

There she enrolled in the weaving workshop and began to experiment with new materials. Embracing modernism, she used straight lines and bold colors to create wall hangings.

She met her husband, famed artist Josef Albers, at the Bauhaus shortly after she enrolled, and the couple was married in 1925. When the school was forced to close in 1933, the couple emigrated to the United States, where they both took teaching positions at Black Mountain College in North Carolina.

In 1950 the Alberses moved to Connecticut, in order for Josef to accept the position of chairman of the Department of Design at Yale University. In 1951, Anni began her three-decades long collaboration with Knoll Textiles. Her designs have had a lasting effect in the field of textile design.

From albersfoundation.org and dwr.com
All images from albersfoundation.org



Albers at the loom

Josef and Anni Albers

Black-White-Gold

City

Intersecting

In Orbit

La Luz

Red Meander

Open Letter

Six Prayers

Under Way

Pasture

Monday, May 13, 2013

Josef Albers

Josef Albers (1888-1976) was born in Bottrop, Germany, where he later taught elementary school and art. In 1920 he became a student at the Bauhaus, where he worked primarily in stained and sandblasted glass. He also designed furniture, household items and typeface.

In 1925 he was the first Bauhaus student to be asked to teach there and become a "master," becoming one of their best-known artists and instructors. He met and married Annelise Fleischmann there, and they lived alongside Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky and Oscar Schlemmer. His wife, better known as Anni Albers, was a textile designer, weaver, writer and printmaker.

In 1933 the Bauhaus closed, and the Albers immigrated to the United States, where Josef had been asked to teach at the Black Mountain College near Asheville, North Carolina. They were at Black Mountain until 1949, during which time Josef Albers explored printmaking techniques and abstract painting.

In 1950 Albers became chairman of the Department of Design at Yale University School of Art. While there, he trained a new generation of art teachers. Meanwhile, he wrote about color theory and continued to paint and make prints.

In 1971 he was the first living artist to be honored with a solo retrospective at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. He died in 1976 and is best known for the Homages to the Square he painted between 1950 and 1976 and for his innovative 1963 publication The Interaction of Color.

From albersfoundation.org
All images from albersfoundation.org



Red and White, 1923 (stained glass window)

Fruitbowl, 1924

Teacup, 1926

Stacking tables, 1926

Goldrosa - Upward (Structure in Red), 1926 (glass)

Armchair, 1928

Design for universal typeface, 1926

Sanctuary, 1942

Variant/Adobe, 1947

Homage to the Square: Blue and Green, 1950

Homage to the Square: Guarded, 1952

Repeat and Reverse, 1963

Homage to the Square, 1966

Homage to the Square, 1976