BIOGRAFIA:
JOSEPH
ALBERS 1888 - 1976
"As ‘gentlemen prefer blondes’,
so everyone has a preference for certain colors and prejudices
against others. This applies to colour combinations as well."
Joseph Albers was born to a family of artisans in Bottrop Germany
and inherited a family tradition of careful, exact workmanship.
As a young man, the works of C?zanne, Matisse, and Cubism inspired
him. After attending the K?nigliche Kunstschule in Berlin from
1913 to 1915, he was certified as an art teacher. In 1915, he
married Anni Fleischmann, who became a noted weaver and his
wife of fifty-one years. From 1913 to 1920, he studied art in
Berlin and in Munich, but his most significant education took
place in Weimar, Germany at the Bauhaus, an association of artists,
craftsmen, and architects committed to a creed of merging craft
techniques with creative aspects of fine art. As a student,
he became renowned for stained glass designs that he created
from broken bottles and fragments he found at the city dump.
These "found object" designs show his early predilection
for optics.
Beginning in 1923, he became a Bauhaus
teacher and taught furniture design, drawing, and calligraphy.
He helped guide the Bauhaus away from expressionism and towards
a constructivist art in the service of architecture. This was
achieved through an extreme reduction in form to a lapidary,
geometric idiom. During this time, Albers contributed significantly
to the development of industrial design. His working philosophy
was to build carefully and meticulously with sturdy materials
from a base of simple, fundamental forms too increasingly complex
shapes. In 1933, Albers and his associates dissolved the Bauhaus
because of Nazi pressure. He and his wife moved to America,
where he spent the next sixteen years as head of the art department
at the newly established, Black Mountain College, New Carolina,
an experimental school operating with the principle that fine
art integrated all learning.
Albers became a prolific artist, known
primarily for his "Homage’s to Squares." Although
he disavowed style category labels, he is credited with influencing
the movements of Geometric Abstraction and Minimalism. He was
also one of the first modern artists to investigate the psychological
effects of color and space and to question the nature of perception.
Indicative of the impact of his work is the fact that he was
the first living artist to have a solo exhibition at the Metropolitan
Museum in New York.
He influenced many artists such as Neil
Welliver and Robert Rauschenberg. From 1950 to 1958, Albers
served as Chairman of the Department of Design at Yale University.
As an art teacher in America, his methods were both innovative
and shocking because he eliminated copying from nature and from
other artists. His goal was to create an attunement or close
investigative relationship between the artist and the work and
to exclude anything that might interfere with this synchrony.
To set the tone, he began his classes with kinetic exercises
whereby each student was asked to foreshadow with movement the
designs he or she intended to depict in their artwork.
The square was the ideal shape for Albers’
"Homage’s," series. Squares were mathematically
related to each other in size, perfect for superimposition,
shapes that never occur in nature--thus assuring its man-made
quality. Albers intended that the colours in his "Homage’s"
series react with each other when processed by the human eye,
causing optical illusions due to the eye's ability to continually
change the colors in ways that echo, support, and oppose one
another. He executed these paintings with a deliberate, careful
technique using a minimum of tools and paint. He hated chaos
and was adamantly opposed to the freedoms of Abstract Expressionism.
When working, he applied one base or primary coat to Masonite,
a ground he found most durable, and then squeezed unmixed paints
directly from the tubes and spread the paint evenly and as thinly
as possible with a palette knife.
In addition to painting, printmaking, and
executing murals and architectural commissions, Albers published
poetry, articles, and books on art. Thus, as a theoretician
and teacher, he was an important influence on generations of
young artists. As a colour theoretician, the principles, he
sought to illustrate were reversed grounds, transparencies,
space, and vibrating boundaries. Albers explained that since
"color deceives continually", he developed a unique
experimental way to study and teach color through a series of
practical exercises. Albers, who taught at Yale and lectured
widely, combined the careers of teacher and painter so that
his paintings demonstrate his theories and his theories draw
upon his discoveries in design and color.
Biography by Pierre
fuente
http://www.articons.co.uk