Josef Albers - Glass, Color, and Light
Josef Albers - Glass, Color, and Light
Josef Albers - Glass, Color, and Light
Cover:
Park, ca. 1924 (cat. no. 7). Glass, wire, metal, and
paint, in woodframe; 49.5 x 38 cm (l9'/ 2 x 15 inches).
Printed in Germany
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2012 with funding from
Metropolitan New York Library Council - METRO
http://archive.org/details/glascoliOOalbe
Josef Albers Glass, Color. andLight
Josef Albers Glass, Color, andLight
GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM
1994 The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, Josef Albers Glass, Color, and Light
New York. All rights reserved.
Published 1994. Second edition 1994. Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice
ISBN 0-8109-6864-9 (hardcover) March 30-July 10, 1994
ISBN 0-89207-128-1 (softcover)
Printed in Germany by Cantz. Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Rome
July 21-October 3, 1994
All Josef Albers works 1994 The Josef Albers Foundation,
Orange, Connecticut. Used by permission. All rights reserved. IVAM Centre Julio Gonzalez, Valencia
November 3, 1994-January 8, 1995
Guggenheim Museum Publications
1071 Fifth Avenue Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York
New York, New York 10128 June 7-Sept. 17, 1995
Lee Stalsworth; nos. 4, 7, 8, II, 16, 17, 26, 29, 34, 35, 41, 46,
48-52, Tim Nighswander; nos. 5, 12, 20, 21, 28, 33, 44,
Cover: Park, ca. 1924 (cat. no. 7). Glass, wire, metal, and
paint, in wood trame; 49.5 x 38 cm (19 'h x 15 inches).
The Josef Albers Foundation.
Contents Preface
Philip Rylands
Catalogue 27
Brenda Danilowitz
Josef Albers
Chronology 14
Exhibitions 148
showings, and lias enthusiastically supported our programs from the Regione Veneto. Since 1992, the
requests lor loans from other collections. The Josef collection has benefited greatly from the generous
Albers Foundation has also helped to resolve difficult support of a group of international corporate
questions of framing and installation and has benefactors, Intrapresa? Collezione Guggenheim.
assumed many of the preparatory costs. We would This association includes Aermec, Arclinea, Bisazza
like to thank the foundation's Brenda Danilowitz, Mosaico, Cartiere Miliani Fabriano, Gruppo 3M Italia,
Curatorial Associate; Kelly Feeney, Curatorial Impresa Gadola, Istituto Poligrafico e Zecca dello
Associate; and Phyllis Fitzgerald, Administrative Stato, Knoll Italia, Reggiani Illuminazione, Rex
Assistant, for their indefatigable work on the Built-in, Safilo Group, and Swatch. The Peggy
exhibition and this catalogue. Guggenheim Collection is grateful for financial
We would also like to express our gratitude to Jared support for specific aspects of the project from
Bark and James Dearing, whose inventive and Alitalia and from the Josef Albers Foundation.
meticulous framing has enabled us to show the glass It has been a great pleasure to collaborate with the
works to the best possible effect for the first time. other institutions hosting Josef Albas: Glass, Color.
They have employed professionalism, technical and Light, including the Palazzo delle Esposizioni,
know-how, and a sense of aesthetics in creating new Rome; IVAM Centre Julio Gonzalez, Valencia; and
standards for the presentation of these works, and Smith College Museum of Art, Northampton,
they did so under a demanding schedule. Massachusetts.
This catalogue is more than the permanent This exhibition has been made possible both by the
record of a transient event. Brenda Danilowitz has loan of works from the Josef Albers Foundation and
documented all known works on glass by Albers, by the generosity of other museums and collectors.
extant or otherwise, and has thus contributed The international loan of glass objects represents no
to the catalogue raisonne of Albers's oeuvre. This small gesture of confidence and is a gratifying
has been a major project, in research and in expression of support. Therefore, we most warmly
editing, conducted by the staff of the Josef Albers thank Mr. and Mrs. James H. Clark, Jr. of Dallas,
Foundation together with the Publications Texas; the Josef Albers Museum, Bottrop, Germany;
Department of the Solomon R. Guggenheim the Department of Twentieth Century Art of the
Museum Anthony Calnek, Director of MetropolitanMuseum of Art, New York; the
Publications, and Laura Morris, Associate Editor, in Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden,
particular and with Chiara Barbieri, Deputy Washington, D.C.; the Kunsthaus Zurich; as well as
Director's Assistant, of the Peggy Guggenheim our colleagues at the Solomon R. Guggenheim
Collection. Museum.
We would like to acknowledge the role of certain
Guggenheim staff members who have worked
beyond the call make Josef Albers: Glass,
of duty to
Color, and Light a success: Fred Licht contributed his
expertise and wrote an essay for this catalogue; Paul
Schwartzbaum, Chief Conservator and Assistant
Director for Technical Services for the New York
museum and Conservator for the Venice institution,
carried out advisory and supervisory work that no
one else could have done so ably. Renata Rossani,
Administrator, stoically worked out all the shipping
arrangements (and many other details) together with
Chiara Barbieri. Claudia Rech, Development and
Public Affairs Officer, and Annarita Fuso, Public-
A New Light: Josef Alberss Work in Glass Windows bring light into darkness. In Gothic
Nicholas Fox Weber cathedrals, not only did they illuminate vast
interiors in which, without them, one would
barely have been able to see beyond the haze of
candlelight and oil lamps but these openings to
the outdoors also represented the lux nova (new
light) ot Christian faith. Window light overcame the
darkness or blindness of all that had preceded.
Where previously there had been confusion, and
vision had been obscured, once the sun's rays
passed through glass there was, quite literally,
enlightenment.
It was the image of one of these Gothic cathedrals
that, in 1920, beckoned Josef Albers to the Bauhaus.
The cathedral was in a woodcut by Lyonel Feiningcr
on the cover of a simple four-page pamphlet
describing the experimental new school in Weimar.
Feininger's image was there, ostensibly, as a symbol
of the integration of all the arts. Walter Gropius, the
founding director of the school, reiterated that goal
in a statement inside the pamphlet, which stressed
proficiency in craft. But the cathedral also implied a
certain spiritualism. With its towers soaring
heavenward and its wondrous windows, it signified a
new light.
Windows not only invite brightness, but also allow
the old to be discarded. "I was thirty-two . . . threw
all my more
old things out the window, started once
from the bottom. That was the best step I made in
my life,"' Albers said of his move to the Bauhaus.
Going there was no easy trick for the impoverished
public-school teacher, who had to arrange funding
from the regional teaching system of Nordrhein-
Westfalen, with which he was affiliated, and then
forsake almost all of the traditions in which he had
been educated. But it was worth chucking the past
to enter this brave new world.
It was perfectly fitting that windows were what
Albers elected to create once he was at the Bauhaus.
Glass was his medium of choice throughout his years
at the school, both when he was a student and after
he was elevated to the position ot master. His
fondness tor the material persisted through every
incarnation of the Bauhaus: from its infancy in
Weimar, through its heyday in Dessau, to its last
legs in Berlin, where it struggled nobly to survive
until the gestapo padlocked the doors and tried to
shatter the dream. Glass enabled Albers to realize
AJbers with Herbert and Murzi Bayer, Ascona, his most cherished uoals; with this relatively
Switzerland, 1929. ordinary form of matter, he could make a pier< ing
IO light shine brightly and the old and dark disappear.
Technical know-how could lead to spiritual uplift.
Mastery of craft might beget poetry and laughter.
And with glass the artist could give exultant voice
to a range of resplendent, and seemingly holy, colors.
The clarity implicit in the lux nova was Josef
Albers's perpetual aim. From the time of the early,
single-line drawings of farm animals that he
made as a grade-school teacher in his mid-twenties,
through the twenty-six years he tirelessly pursued
his Homages to the Square
between 1950, when
he was sixty-two, and 1976, the year of his death
he eschewed the murky and vague in favor of the
crisp and decisive. In his work and teachings,
he always made claim for the value of staying away
from private emotions because they are difficult
to fathom accurately and are not universal. Art
should provide something else: a lift, an awakening,
a removal into another, brighter sphere. No wonder
the fabulous substance of glass offered Albers so
much. Its translucency, its vibrant transmission of
color, its mutability, and its ability to be cut,
assembled, and sandblasted in myriad arrangements
that bear no direct evidence of personal handwriting
made all of the spiritual and visual possibilities
resoundingly, gloriously apparent.
As much as Albers regarded his move to the
Bauhaus and his immersion in the making
of abstract art as an about-face shift, it was not,
Lyonel Feininger's Cathedral for the cover of the 1919 Bauhaus
program. Woodcut, printed in black, on paper, block 30.5 x however, the total schism with his own past that
19 cm The Museum of Modern Art, New
(12 x 7V2 inches). he suggested. Born in 1888 in the industrial
Abby Aldrich Rockefeller 156.45.
York, Gift of
Photograph 1994 The Museum of Modern Art, New York.
city of Bottrop located in Westphalia, not far
from the Miinsterland, a pocket of Catholicism in
northern
Germany the artist was brought up a
Catholic, and knew and respected the dogmas
and traditions inculcated upon him since birth.
The faith and the texts of his religion remained
with him always, as did the training he had
received from his father, who, by Albers's account,
had shown him how to etch and paint glass. At
the Bauhaus, he approached the medium in a
completely different and pioneering way, but he
did so with values that had been paramount to
him for as long as he could remember: a high
regard for traditional craftsmanship and a sense of
the miraculous.
Glass was the symbol of an essential basis oi
Catholicism: the conception whereby Mary became
the mother of Jesus. A medieval hymn made clear
the metaphoric role of the material:
As the sunbeam through the glass
Passetb but not breaketh,
So the Virgin, as she was,
Virgin still remaineth.*
Masonite and his engravings and embossings. He But, fortunately, a number of pieces have survived
manipulated those mediums to emulate many of he- t from his early, jubilant period, and the restorer's art
conditions of glassmaking, above all in the Homagt to has proved beneficent for some that were racked or
(
the Square panels. In those paintings, which he broken entirely. The presentation of so much of this
the entire ruthlessness and inefficiency of those who had 3. Jean Genet, "Something Which Seemed to Resemble
Decay . . .
," trans. Bernard Frechtman, Antaeus, no. S4 (spring
handled the articles. . .Ten of my thirty-two Glass
.
1985), p. 114.
Pictures were broken or cracked. They had been
. . .
ruthlessly and carelessly stacked against each other 4. Conversation with the author, January 11, 1974.
without the least consideration of their fragility, size, or
weight.' 5. Letter in the archives of thejosel Albers Foundation,
Orange, Conn.
sheet, 49.5 x 44.4 cm (19 'A x 17 7. inches). The Metropolitan music, Beethoven, and in literature, Goethe. True.
Museum of Art, New York, Gift of the Artist, 1972 1972. 40.1. there are predecessors for all these exemplars. Luther
1 came before Kant, Bach before Beethoven, and
Klopstock before Goethe. Be that as it may, Luther,
Bach, and Klopstock did not found continua of
German philosophy, music, and poetry, respectively,
whereas from Kant, Beethoven, and Goethe,
they seem to rise like a consistent and majestic
monument, without seams or interruptions.
In German visual arts, there is no single figure
who serves such a role. Typifying an important trend
that continued to develop through the nineteenth
century, the Nazarenes sought moral regeneration
through art by attempting to revive a lost Golden
Age. Caspar David Friedrich represents the note of
isolated, naive introspection that is characteristic of
so much of German art. Philipp Otto Runge, the
most complex of the founding fathers of German art
and the most influential upon the formative years of
subsequent artists, combined in his work a scientific
bent, a sense of religious obligation, and a powerful
impulse toward historical speculation.
It may seem farfetched to return to German
! .
tmmmm
i
with the knowledge he had gained from previous
works. The fragments of wire mesh of irregular,
indeterminate shape and dimension in Untitled are
reminiscent of medieval glass leading but are
actually as random as the pieces of glass with which
iIII _
cat. no. 5)
shaped elements and substituted for them a logical, rarely did he again make reference to the
tectonic organization, which orders distinct groups religious/visual strategies of Runge and Friedrich.
oi green, blue, and white rectangles into a modular Yet, if we wish to grasp the full implications oi
system. The metal framework, which still plays a his laterdevelopment, it is useful to remember his
slightly calligraphic role in Grid Mounted, assumes accomplishment in Park. Light, whether evoked by
an exclusively architectural function in Park. Only pure color combinations (as in the Homage to the
the changes in thickness of the metal strips afford a Square paintings) or by rhythmic interactions and
small measure of variation. The slightly wider strips rapid switches between reflecting and matte surfaces
of leading divide the areas of color into distinct (as in the elaborate glass works of the 1920s),
groups of blocks of a single color or into represents illumination in the spiritual sense of the
checkerboard arrangements. In the vertical word. Nor should we forget that in 1955 Albers
configuration of olive-green squares on the left, the completed perhaps his most successful monumental
thicker strips not only outline the particular commission, a large window for the altar of the
chromatic group but also accentuate the shift from Abbot's Chapel in St. John's Abbey Church in
left to right of the lower block of olive-green Collegeville, Minnesota (see no. 7 in the Appendix
squares.Although far from uniform, the of Works in Glass for Architectural Projects). Whitt
arrangement of the individual squares and the linear Cross Window is made of photosensitive glass, which
structure retain an architectural rather than did not exist in the 1920s. Although this window is
apogee in the Homage to the Square series. In Park, impossible to resolve the question of which artist,
Albers set aside the seductive powers of color in Albers or Klee, influenced the other, or whether it
order to reveal its spiritual energy. was a mutual exchange). After Park, the two artists
One small area of Park stands out in serene but travel distinctly different paths, Albers pursuing a
insistent contradiction to the work's severe economy course toward constantly increasing monumental itv
in color range and the basic form of the square: the and structural discipline and Klee cultivating the
two rectangles and squares of a mildly glowing pink endless possibilities of traditional easel painting.
to the right and below the center of the panel. Also after this point, Albers moved beyond the
Within the context of the repetitive web of squares ornamental nature inherent to stained glass (as
surrounding it, the black lines within the pink area windows or panels fitted into buildings) to find new
declare themselves very eloquently to be a cross, definitions for glass. Because the Bauhaus aspired to
which we can perceive as a purely formal device or as the integration of painting and sculpture within
a mystic symbol. In either case, the area's effect of architecture, the institution encouraged him to
warmth and stable tranquility within the overall search tor the structural rather than the isolated. To
syncopation of cool colors is deeply moving. Isolated fulfill these new demands, Albers began to develop a
and diminutive, the area asserts itself as the heart new technique for glass imagery in order to make-
of the entire composition and sets the tone to which works that would no longer be composed of separate
all other hues are attuned. elements, like mosaic or stained glass, but would be
This ardent glow is also a last reminder of Albers's one piece, truly architectural in character, lie turned
20 to flashed glass, which is intimately telated to
etching and allows the artist a similar precision of
effect. Rather than use acid, as in etching, Albers
used sand under pressure. Nicholas Fox Weber has
described both the process and the results that can
be attained from the medium with such succinct
accuracy that I can do no better than to quote him:
'
squares on the red ground in the extreme lower- the earlier glass compositions.
Glove Stretchers is a far more enterprising departure. 23
Deceptively simple, the work quickly becomes a
teasing conundrum as soon as we examine it
attentively. To begin with, the image evokes the
comparison of glove stretchers to hands, as well as
the equation that glove stretchers are the interior
diagrams of gloves as gloves are the exterior
diagrams of hands. This perplexing relationship
between organic and inorganic becomes the subject
of the picture. The deliberate ambiguity of the form
at the right leads to further speculation. Is that
shape a hand or glove? Is its solid white patch a
"hole" exposing a white ground hidden behind the
dominant gray expanse, or is it light modeling the
black "hand"? Also teasing are the two elements
clearly defined by their hooks as glove stretchers.
Near form at the left,
reversals of each other, the
with fingers pointing up, is white against a black
ground, and the other stretcher, with fingers
pointing down, is black against a white profile,
rather than a white ground. The pattern of diagonals
that traverse both glove stretchers follows suit. In
the white glove stretcher, the diagonals are the black
lines that command the entire gray field, while in
the black stretcher, those narrow black lines
abruptly turn into gray ones and the gray ground
becomes wide black bands. In addition, the
horizontal black strip at the bottom of the panel
and the white one at the top are problematic in that
they do not inhabit the same spatial planes as the
image's other blacks and whites. We are in turn
bemused, baffled, and even irritated by the insidious
Factor), 1925. Sandblasted flashed glass with black paint, ;s 8 x
ingenuity of this very simple graphic image. 45.8 cm (14 'A x 18 7. inches). Yale University Art Gallery,
The unusually ambitious, large Treble Clef of 1932 New Haven 1 977.1 60.1.
is somehow more harmonious, more sensuously
satisfying than the other glass paintings dealing Glim Stretchers, 1928. Sandblasted opaque Sashed ,ulass,
40 x 52.9 cm (15 '/, x 20 "/.1. inches). The Josef Albcts
with recognizable forms. In it, glass reveals its full
Foundation GL-19.
power both the material and the spiritual
to unite
realms. The white area seems to absorb light into its
very core so that what is essentially a glossy, hard
substance becomes an immaterial white aura. Just as
Albers was capable of making antagonistic colors
coexist, he was able to harmonize various degrees of
reflection, refraction, and absorption of light
without sacrificing the individual characteristics of
these properties.
Albers transposed the treble clef, a symbol
familiar
depending on sheer convention tor its meaning, into
a purely pictorial motif by putting it in apposition
1988), p. 23.
B.l).
i. Figure
1921
Glass assemblage mounted on brass sheet
54.6 x 39.4 cm (21 '!. x 15 </i inches)
Signed and dated "Albers 1921" at lower right
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Gift of the Artist, 1972 1972.40.2
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; Cambridge, Mass., 1936; New York, 1938;
New York, 1988
References:
Gomringer, 1968; Kehlmann, 1992; The Museum of Modern
Art, 1938; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988; Spies,
1970; Wissman, 1971
2. Rheinhche Legende (Rhenish Legend)
1921
Glass assemblage mounted on copper sheet
49.5 x 44.4 cm (19 /. x 17 'h inches)
Signed and dated "Albers 1921" at lower right
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Gift of the Artist, 1972 1972. 40.1
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1936; Cambridge, Mass., 1936;
New Haven, 1956; New York, 1988
References:
Finkelstein, 1979; Gomringer, 1968; Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum, 1988; Yale University Art Gallery, 1956
3. Fensterbild {Window Picture)
1921
Glass, wire, painted metal, nails, mesh, imitation pearls, and
brush and ink, on painted wood box
58.4 x 55.2 x 21.2 cm (23 x 21 >/j x 8 1/8 inches)
Signed and dated "Albers 1921" at lower right of both the
work and box
Hirshhorn Museum andSculpture Garden, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C.
Gift of Joseph H. Hirshhorn, 1972 HMSG 72.6
Albers had a light box fabricated for this work in 1938. The
work has been removed from the box for display in the current
exhibition
Exhibitions:
Andover, Mass., 1938; New York, 1988
References:
Lerner, [1974]; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988
4. Untitled
1921
Glass, wire, and metal, set in metal frame
37.5 x 29.8 cm (14
4 x 11 >/< inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-24
in Braunschweig, 1933
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1988
Reference:
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988
5. Gitterbi/d (Grid Mounted)
1921
Glass pieces interlaced with copper wire, in a sheet
of fence latticework
32.4 x 28.9 cm (12 v 4 x 11 /8 inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-21
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1938; New Haven, 1956;
New York, 1988
References:
Benezra, 1985; Finkelstein, 1979; Gomringer, 1968; Kehlmann,
1992; The Museum of Modern Art, 1938; Rowell, 1972;
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988; Wissman, 1971;
Yale University Art Gallery, 1956
6. Kaiser/wb
ca. 1923
Exhibition:
New Haven, 1956
References:
Finkelstein, 1979; Gomringer, 1968; Schumacher, 1983;
Yale University Art Gallery, 1956
7. Park
ca. 1924
Glass, wire, metal, and paint, in wood frame
49.5 x 38 cm (19 /> x 15 inches)
Inscribed "Bauhaus Weimar" at lower right
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-28
Reference:
Rotzler, 1977
8. Factory'
1925
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
29.4 x 36 cm (11 5/16 x 14 s/16 inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-4
Exhibitions:
New York, 1936; Montreal, 1991
Reference:
The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, 1991
9. Factory
1925
Sandblasted flashed glass with black paint
35.8 x 45.8 cm (14 Vs x 18 v. inches)
Inscribed "Factory" in pencil on frame
Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven 1977. 160.
Exhibitions:
New Haven, 1956; New York, 1988; London, 1994
References:
Gomringer, 1958; Kehlmann, 1992; Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum, 1988; The South Bank Centre, 1994; Yale University
Art Gallery, 1956
io. Fabrik B (Factory B)
1925
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
30 x 34 cm (11 'A, x 13 i/s inches)
Titled, signed, and dated on reverse
Museum Morsbroich, Leverkusen 3154
Exhibitions:
Berlin, 1958; Locarno, 1959; Zurich, i960; Dusseldorf, 1970;
Paris, 1978
References:
Gomringer, 1968; Musee d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris,
1925
Sandblasted flashed glass with black paint
32.4 x 31.4 cm (12 v 4 x 12 V8 inches)
Signed and dated "Albers 1925" on reverse
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-5
Exhibitions:
London, 1962; Montreal, 1991
References:
Gomringer, 1958; Gomringer, 1968; The Montreal Museum of
Fine Arts, 1991; Wissman, 1971
12. Fuge (Fugue)
1925
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
24.8 x 65.7 cm (9 '
4 x 25 7s inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-6
(illustrated)
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1988; London, 1994
References:
Albers, 1933; Benezra, 1985; Finkelstein, 1979; Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum, 1988; The South Bank Centre, 1994;
Staber, 1965
1925
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
24.5 x 66 cm (9 vs x 26 inches)
Kunstmuseum Basel
(not illustrated)
Exhibition:
New Haven, 1956
References:
Albers, 1964; Gomringer, 1968; Schmidt, 1964; Staber, 1965;
Wissman, 1971
14- Fuge II (Fugue II)
1925
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
15.8 x 58.1 cm (6 <u x 22^/8 inches)
Signed and dated "Albers 1925" on reverse
Hirshhorn Museum and
Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C.
Gift of the Joseph H. Hirshhorn Foundation, 1972 HMSG 72.4
Exhibition:
New York, 1988
References:
Lerner, [1974]; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988
15- Tektonische Gruppe (Tectonic Group)
1925
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
29 x 45 cm (11 Vs x 17 v 4 inches)
Collection of Max Bill
Reference:
Bill, 1958
16. Goldrosa
(also known as Upward and Structure in Red)
ca. 1926
Sandblasted flashed glass with black paint
44.6 x 31.4 cm (i7'V.6 x I2V8 inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-i
Exhibition:
Berlin, 1958
YJ. Upward
ca. 1926
Sandblasted flashed glass with black paint
44.6 x 31.4 cm (17^/16 x 12 Vi inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-2
(illustrated)
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1938; New Haven, 1956;
Zurich, i960; New York, 1988; Montreal, 1991
References:
Gomringer, 1968; Kehlmann, 1992; The Montreal Museum
The Museum of Modern Art, 1938;
of Fine Arts, 1991;
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988; Yale University Art
Gallery, 1956
ca. 1926
Sandblasted flashed glass with black paint
43.5 x 30 cm (17 'it x 11 /i inches)
Collection of Sally and Eliot Robinson
(not illustrated)
ca. 1926
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
28.5 x 30.1 cm (11 v 4 x 11 7/1 inches)
Inscribed "Latticework Albers ca. 1926" on reverse of frame
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C.
Gift of the Joseph H. Hirshhorn Foundation, 1974 HMSG 74.5
Exhibitions:
London, 1962; New York, 1988
Reference:
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988
20. Dominating White
1927
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
22.1 x 30 cm (8 "/.<. x 11 'V.6 inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-3
Exhibition:
New York, 1988
Reference:
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988
21. Frontal
1927
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
34.8 x 47.9 cm (13 "/.6 x 18 7
/ inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-10
Exhibitions:
New Haven, 1956; New York, 1988; Montreal, 1991
References:
The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, 1991; Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum, 1988; Yale University Art
Gallery, 1956
22. Interlocked
1927
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
32.7 x 52.2 cm (12 7s x 20/rf inches)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York
Gift, The Josef Albers Foundation, 1991 91.3877
1927
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
60.1 x 27.9 cm (23 V8 x 10 'V.6 inches)
Inscribed, on reverse of metal support, in Albers's hand:
"Overlapping Albers cir. 1927 can be hung from any
side / do not stand this against wall / might slide because
of metal frame / when dusty or soiled clean with wet
cloth + soap"; at bottom of reverse is part of a label that
reads: Gemeinschaft 3346"
". . . t
Exhibitions:
New York, 1949; Princeton, 1971; Cambridge, Mass., 1971;
Cambridge, Mass., 1991
References:
The Art Museum, Princeton University, 1971; The
Busch-Reisinger Museum, 1971; Ehrlich, 1991; Finkelstein,
1979; Haxthausen, 1980; Rowell, 1972; Wight, 1974
24. Pillars
1928
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
29.9 x 31. 1 cm (11 v4 x 12 v 4 inches)
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
George A. Hearn Fund, 1970 1970.139
Exhibition:
New York, 1971
References:
Finkelstein, 1979; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1971;
Spies, 1970
25. Walls and Screens
(also known as Pillars II)
1928
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
30.5 x 25.8 cm (12 x 10 7s inches)
Collection of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Clark, Jr.
Exhibitions:
London, 1962; Dallas, 1972; Austin, 1973; New York, 1988
References:
Comune di Ferrara, 1989; Finkelstein, 1979; Gomringer, 1968;
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988
'
'
' ]
26. Handschuhleisten (Glove Stretchers)
1928
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
40 x 52.9 cm (15 ',
4 x 20'Vh, inches)
Signed and dated "Albers 1928" on reverse of Albers's original
composition-board frame (removed in 1987)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-19
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1971; New York, 1988
References:
Finkelstein, 1979; Gomringer, 1968; The Metropolitan
Museum of Art, 1971; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 198^
27. City
1928
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
28 x 55 cm (11 x 21 s/8 inches)
Kunsthaus Zurich Inv. Nr. 1960/8
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; Locarno, 1959; Zurich, i960
References:
Albers, i960; Finkelstein, 1979; Gomringer, 1958; Lohse, i960;
Roh, 1958; Staber, 1965; Wingler, 1969
28. City
1928
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
33 x 55.3 cm (13 x 21 v4 inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-14
Exhibition:
New York, 1994
References:
Finkelstein, 1979; Staber, 1965
J B ?BBW Wiif'#-;-
29. Skyscrapers on Transparent Yellow
1927/1929
Sandblasted flashed glass with black paint
35.2 x 34.9 cm (13 /s x 13 v 4 inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-9
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1936; New York, 1988
References:
Benezra, 1985; Gomringer, 1968; Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum, 1988; Spies, 1970
30. Skyscrapers A
(also known as Skyscrapers I
References:
Finkelstein, 1979; Hajos, 1933; The Montreal Museum of
Fine Arts, 1991; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988; Yale
University Art Gallery, 1956
31. Skyscrapers
1927
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
36 x 36 cm (14V16 x 14V16 inches)
Signed and initialed "Albers" and "A" twice on cardboard
backing and also inscribed "wb 27^"
Private collection
(not illustrated)
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32. Skyscrapers B
(also known as Skyscrapers II)
1929
Sandblasted flashed glass
36.2 x 36.2 cm (14 74 x 14 'u inches)
Signed "Albers 1929" on reverse of frame
Hirshhorn Museum andSculpture Garden, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C.
Gift of the Joseph H. Hirshhorn Foundation, 1974 HMSG 74.6
References:
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988; Yale University Art
Gallery, 1956
33- Becber (Beaker)
1929
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
29 x 37 cm (11 7i6 x 14 '/.6 inches)
Private collection
References:
Finkelstein, 1979; Grohmann, 1961
34- Pergola
1929
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
27 x 45.6 cm (10 78 x 17 if* inches)
Signed and dated on reverse of Albers's original composition-
board frame (removed in 1987)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-26
The title was given in 1971 at the time of the work's exhibition
at the Albers retrospective at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
(information in a letter dated July 22, 1971, from Kay Bearman
to Josef Albers, in the files of the Josef Albers Foundation).
Most likely, it was
at this time too that Albers appended
the note to this work that reads "when this side up (i.e. upside
down) it may remind of a Mississippi steamboat"
Exhibitions:
New York, 1971; New York, 1988
References:
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1971; Rowell, 1972;
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988
35- Lauben {Bowers)
1929
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass with black paint
34.6 x 45.7 cm (13 s/8 x 18 inches)
Signed and dated on teverse of Albers's original composition-
board frame (removed in 1987)
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; London, 1962; New York, 1971;
Montreal, 1991
References:
Finkelstein, 1979; Gomnnger, 1968; The Metropolitan
Museum of Art, 1971; The Montreal Museum of Fine
Arts, 1991
}6. Interior a
1929
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
25.6 x 21.4 cm (10 7,6 x 8 7.6 inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-17
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; London, 1962; New York, 1988
References:
Finkelstein, 1979; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988
II
'5 1 *'
-?'? ^whCuS&l^ ii i 1
37 Interior h
iyzy
1929
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
25.4 x 21.5 cm (10 x 8 7.c inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation G
GL-lfc
Refetence:
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988
1
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38. Interior A
1929
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
32.5 x 25.5 cm (12 'Vk x 10 '/i inches)
Josef Albers Museum, Bottrop
References:
Finkelstein, 1979; Gomringer, 1968; Schumacher, 1983;
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988; Yale University Art
Gallery, 1956
39- Interior B
1929
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
33 x 25 cm (13 x 9 "/16 inches)
Josef Albers Museum, Bottrop
References:
Schumacher, 1983; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988;
Yale University Art Gallery, 1956
4-0. Fenster (Windows)
1929
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
33.6 x 37.5 cm (13 "A, x 14 1/4 inches)
Collection of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Clark, Jr.
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New Haven, 1956; London, 1962;
New York, 1988
References:
Albers, 1933; Benezra, 1985; Finkelstein, 1979; Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum, 1988; "Windows," 1963; Yale
University Art Gallery, 1956
41. Fenster (Windows)
1929
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
25 x 28 cm (9 "/.(. x 11 inches)
Westfalisches Landesmuseum fur Kunst und Kulturgeschichte,
Minister Inv. Nr. 1004a LM
References:
Gomringer, 1968; Rowell, 1972; Wissman, 1971
42. Dom {Cathedral)
1930
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
35.4 x 49.1 cm (13 'Vi6 x 19 v.6 inches)
Titled and dated on reverse of Albers's original composition-
board frame (removed in 1987)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-13
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1936
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43- Stufen (Steps)
1931
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
39.4 x 52.1 cm (15 '/= x 20 7 : inches)
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1936; New York, 1988
References:
Gomringer, 1968; Rowell, 1972; Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum, 1988; Spies, 1970
44- lm Wasser (In the Water)
1931
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
45 x 49.3 cm (17 J/
4 x 197/16 inches)
Josef Albers Museum, Bottrop
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1936
References:
Albers, 1933; Albers, n.d., untitled statement; Comune di
Ferrara, 1989; Schumacher, 1983
45- Kabel {Cables)
1931
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
40 x 50 cm (15 /
4 x 19 "/,6 inches)
Signed and dated on reverse of Albers's original composition-
board frame (removed in 1987)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-12
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1936
References:
Abstraction-Creation, 1936; Finkelstein, 1979
46. Unmogliche (Impossibles)
1931
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
45 x 37.7 cm (17 "/.6 x 147/8 inches)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York
Gift, The Josef Albers Foundation, 1991 91.3878
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1971
References:
Gomringer, 1958; Gomringer, 1968; The Metropolitan Museum
of Art, 1971; Staber, 1965
47- Falsch gewickelt {Rolled Wrongly)
1931
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
42.1 x 42.1 cm (169/16 x 169/16 inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-22
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933;New York, 1936; New Haven, 1956;
New York, 1971; New York, 1988
References:
Abstraction-Creation, 1934; Finkelstein, 1979; The Metropolitan
Museum of Art, 1971; Rowell, 1972; Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum, 1988; Spies, 1970; Yale University Art Gallery, 1956
48. Fliegend (Flying)
1931
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass mounted on cardboatd
30.2 x 35 cm (11 7
/s x 13 >/ 4 inches)
Staatsgalerie Stuttgart Inv. No. 3276
References:
Finkelstein, 1979; Wissman, 1971
49- Six and Three
(also known as Four Sixes and Three Threes)
1931
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
56 x 35.5 cm (22716 x 14 inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-16
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1994
50. Gesimse {Shelves)
1932
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
34 x 64.9 cm (13 i/s x 25 /! inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-15
Exhibition:
Braunschweig, 1933
51. Klaviatur {Keyboard)
1932
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
37.3 x 64.9 cm (14 "A6 x 25^/16 inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-7
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; New York, 1936; New York, ic
Reference:
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1988
52. Diskant VII {Treble Clef)
1932
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
76.5 x 45.1 cm (30 Vs x 173/4 inches)
The Josef Albers Foundation GL-n
53- K-Trio
1932
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
47.9 x 54.8 cm (18 / x 21 /i< inches)
7
Exhibition:
Braunschweig, 1933
Appendix of Destroyed and Lost Works Of the sixty-one wall pictures in glass by Jose!
Albers that have been identified, eight have been
either destroyed or lost track of through the years.
The last four works illustrated in this appendix art-
known to us only through unlabeled photographs.
130 i. Fabrik A {Factory A)
1925
Sandblasted flashed glass with black paint
46 x 35.5 cm (18 vs x 14 inches)
Location unknown
Exhibitions:
Berlin, 1958; Locarno, 1959; Zurich, i960
Reference:
Gomringer, 1958
1927
Sandblasted opaque flashed glass
Destroyed
Braunschweig, 1933
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, 1933; London, 1962
3- Nachrollen t31
[931
Sandblasted flashed glass
Location unknown
Exhibitions:
Braunschweig, [933; New Haven, 1956
Reference:
Loew, 1956
[932
Sandblasted Hashed glass
Location unknown
Exhibition:
Braunschweig, 1933
Reference:
Finkelstein, 1979
5. Title unknown
I
L
132 6. Title unknown
7. Title unknown
-N.F.W
136 i. Rosa mystka ora pro nobis, St. Michael's Church, Bottrop,
Germany
Stained-glass window
Executed by Puhl & Wagner-Gottfried Heinersdorf, Berlin
1917-18
Destroyed
2. Sommerteld house, Berlin-Steglitz 137
Stained-^lass window in second-floor stairwell
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138 4- Grassi Museum, Leipzig
Ten stained-glass windows in first- and second-floor stairwells
Executed by Puhl & Wagner-Gottfried Heinersdorf, Berlin
1923
Destroyed
v Red and Whitt Windou . Bauhaus, Weimar [39
Stained-glass window in antechamber of director's office
1
140 7- White Cross Window, Abbot's Chapel, St. John's Abbey
Church, Collegeville, Minnesota
Window of photosensitive glass panels
Executed by Corning Glass Works, Corning, New York
1955
lor the Westfalian regional Franz von Stuck \ drawing special Bauhaus issue of
teaching system. class and Max Doerner's Hamburg periodical _///#*
course in painting technique. Menschen.
[913-15 Makes many figurative
Attends Komgliche drawings there, as well as 1925
Kunstschule, Berlin, where brush and ink drawings of Movi s w nil ilu Bauhaus
he studies art education the rural Bavarian town of to Dessau Appointed
under Philipp Franck. Mittenwald. Bauhaus master Marries
Exempted from military Anneliese Fleisi hmann, a
[915 ex< eption of Ins photographs Style tor the next tour
Ki 1 1 i\es certificate as art and designs tor turn tional \ears
teacher. obje< ts. is abstrai t.
[926
[91619 1920-23 D< signs tea glasses ol glass,
glass art isan ami draw ing in epi ion room of Gropius s tor the Berlin apartment of
144 Drs. Fritz and Anno the Bauhaus; Albers becomes 1936-40
Moellenhoff. assistant director. At invitation of Gropius,
holds seminars and lectures
1926-32 1932 at the Graduate School of
Takes numerous black-and- Moves with the Bauhaus Design, Harvard University,
white photographs, many of to Berlin. Has first solo Cambridge, Massachusetts.
which he mounts as photo- show at the Bauhaus, a Paints, in gouache and oil,
collages, including portraits comprehensive exhibition of various small series of
of his Bauhaus colleagues. glass works from 1920 to geometric abstractions of
Albers (third from right) and 1932. In addition to basic highly diverse imagery.
friends, Berlin, ca. 1914. 1928 design, teaches freehand
Gropius leaves the Bauhaus drawing and lettering. 1936-41
and is replaced by Hannes Begins Treble Clef series in Exhibits glass paintings from
Meyer. Albers takes charge of different mediums, his first the Bauhaus period, new oil
the preliminary course and major use of a single form paintings, and other works in
lectures at the International repeated with very slight over twenty solo shows in
Congress for Art Education, compositional variations in American galleries.
Prague. Designs an many different color
upholstered wood chair. His schemes. 1937
stained-glass windows for Included in first American
Ullstein Publishing House, 1933 Abstract Artists exhibition at
Berlin-Tempelhof, are With other remaining Squibb Galleries, New York,
executed (destroyed); here, faculty members, closes the April 3-17.
as in the Grassi Museum Bauhaus. Executes series of
windows, the design is a woodcut and linoleum-cut 1939
more simplified geometric prints in Berlin. Becomes a United States
abstraction than in earlier citizen.
works. Black Mountain College
1940-42
1928-30 1933 Makes autumn-leaf collages
Following Marcel Breuer's On the recommendation of and small drypoints of
departure in 1928, Albers Philip Johnson at the meandering linear
assumes directorship of the Museum of Modern Art, compositions.
furniture workshop, a New York, Josef and Anni
position Breuer had held Albers are invited to teach at 1941
since 1925. Heads wallpaper- the newly founded Black Takes a sabbatical year,
design program. Mountain College, North painting in New Mexico
Carolina, where they arrive and teaching basic design
192.9 on November 28. Albers is and color at Harvard.
Shows twenty glass paintings based there for the next
in exhibition of Bauhaus sixteen years. 1941-42
masters in Zurich and Basel; Executes Graphic Tectonic
other artists featured include 1934 series of drawings and zinc-
Vasily Kandinsky and Paul Gives lecture series at plate lithographs featuring
Klee. Designs a chair for Lyceum, Havana, Cuba. geometric imagery
mass production. Executes woodcuts and that emphasizes the use of
linoleum cuts in Asheville, drafting tools in the creative
1929-32 North Carolina, near Black process.
Continues to make Mountain College.
sandblasted glass 1942-46
constructions, now using I93S Plays increasingly active role
illusionistic, volumetric Makes first of fourteen visits in the administration of
forms, most of which to Mexico and Latin Black Mountain College,
combine straight lines and America. Paints first free- writing on educational
curves. form abstractions. theory and lecturing on
behalf of the school.
1930 1936
Ludwig Mies van tier Rohe Executes series of spare 1943
repl.K cs Meyer as director of geometric drawings. Begins B iconjugate and Kinetii
series ol two-figure large wall relicts made in Abbey Church, ( ollege\ ille, '45
geometric abstractions. various materials including Minnesota.
stainless-steel tubes and
m4 incised marble with gold 1956
Makes series of prints in leaf. Has first retrospective
Asheville, many of which exhibition at Yale Universitj
superimpose geometric Yale University Art Gallery. Named
grounds with
figures on Professor ol Art Emeritus at
Wall, for St. Patrick's Florida, Tampa. Receives museum's first retrospective
for the Pan Am Building North Carolina, Chapel Hill, for the Grand Avenue
lobby. New York, and Repeat and honorary Doctor of National Bank lobby, Crown
and Reverse, a steel sculpture, Philosophy at the Ruhr- Center, Kansas City,
Albers teaching at Black Universitiit, Bochum, West Missouri; and Reclining
for the Art and Architecture
Mountain College, at Yale Germany. Figure, a mosaic-tile mural,
Building entrance
August 1948. University. for the Celanese Building
1968 lobby, New York. Named
Albers at his home in
1964 Wins the Grand Prize at honorary Doctor of Fine
New Haven, 1965. Lectures at Smith College, La HI bienal americana de Arts at the Maryland
Northampton, grabado, Santiago, and the Institute and College of Art,
Massachusetts, and the Grand Prize for painting Baltimore. Awarded the
University of Miami. from the State of Nordrhein- Gold Medal at the First
Awarded a second fellowship Westfalen, West Germany. Graphic Biennial, Norway.
by Tamarind Lithography Receives the Commander's
Workshop. Named honorary Cross, Order of Merit of the 1973
Doctor of Fine Arts at German Federal Republic. Josef Albers, Formulation:
the California College of Arts Elected member of the Articulation published.
and Crafts, Oakland, and National Institute of Arts Designs Stanford Wall, a
1977-82
Groups of Albers's paintings
given by Anni Albers and
the Josef Albers Foundation
to the Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum, New
York; Tate Gallery, London;
San Francisco Museum of
Modern Art; Musee National
d'Art Moderne, Centre
Georges Pompidou, Fans;
Detroit Institute of Arts;
Museum of Fine Arts,
1 louston; Berlin
Nationalgalene; Milwaukee
Art Center; Museo de Arte
Contemporaneo, Caracas;
Rijksmuseum Krollcr-
Miiller. ( )tterlo; Louisiana
Museum Modern Art,
ot
Ilumlebaek, Denmark;
Los Angeles County Museum
of Art; and Dallas Museum
ot Art.
1978
Permanent exhibit ion \\ tat <
'4>x Exhibitions with 192.9 1956 1973
Works in Glass Zurich, Kunsthaus Zurich, New Haven, Yale Austin, University Art
Abstrakte und surrealistische University Art Gallery, Museum, University of
Malerei und P/astik. Josef Albers Paintings. Prints. Texas, The Non-Objective
Projects, April 25-June 18. World. 1914-1955,
Basel, Kunsthalle Basel,
Oct. 14-Dec. 15.
Das Bauhaus Dessau,
1958
April 20-May 9.
Berlin, Amerikahaus, with 1978
the Akademie der Kunste, Paris, Musee National d'Art
1932
Josef Albers.Zum yo Moderne, Centre Georges
Berlin, Bauhaus, Josef Albers
Geburtestag, May 731. Pompidou, Paris Berlin,
Glasbilder, twenty-third
July 12-Nov. 6.
Bauhaus Exhibition, May 1-12.
1959
Locarno, Switzerland, 1980
1933
Galleria La Palma, Josef Stockholm, Galerie Christel,
Leipzig, Kunstverein
Albers, July 31-Aug. 21. Albers-Paintings, Jan. Feb.
Leipzig, exhibition with
Maria Slavona, Jan.
i960
Braunschweig, Gesellschaft Zurich, Galerie Suzanne New York, Solomon R.
der Freunde junger Kunst, Bollag, Josef Albers, Guggenheim Museum,
Feb. 26-March 26. (Works Jan. 6-30. Josef Albers: A Retrospective,
Graphics. 1917-19JO,
Montreal, The Montreal
1938 Jan. 5-26.
Museum of Fine Arts, The
Andover, Mass., Addison
Cambridge, Mass., The ip20s: Age of the Metropolis.
Gallery of American Art,
Busch-Reisinger Museum, June 20-Nov. 10.
Phillips Academy,
Harvard University, Concepts
April 10-May 8.
of the Bauhaus: The Busch- 1994
New York, The Museum of Reisinger Museum Collection, London, The South Bank
Modern Art, Bauhaus April 30-Sept. 3. Centre, organizer, Josef
ipip-ip28, Dec. Albers. Dublin, Irish
New York, The Metropolitan
Museum Modern Art,
of
Museum of Art, Josef Albers
1942 Feb. 3-March 27; Coventry,
at The Metropolitan Museum of
Baltimore, The Baltimore The Mead Gallery Arts
Art, Nov. 1971-Jan. 11, 1972.
Museum of Art, Abstractions Centre, April 23-May 21;
by Josef Albers, Dec. 4, 1942- Oxford, The Museum of
1972
Jan. 3, 1943. Modern Art, June 26-
Dallas, Dallas Museum of
Sept. 11; Norwich, The
Fine Arts, Geometric
1949 Norfolk Institute of Art,
Abstraction: 1926-1942,
New York, Egan Gallery, Sept. 26-Nov. 5.
Oct. 7-N0V. 8.
Albers: Paintings in Black,
New York, American Craft
Grey, White. Sidney Janis Austin, University Art
Museum, Bauhaus Workshops:
Gallery, Albers: Paintings Museum, University of
1919-1935, June 30-Oct. 9.
I //ltd "
Variants. "
Joint Texas, Not So Long Ago,
exhibition, Jan. 24-Feb. 12. Oct. 15-Dec. 17.
Select Bibliography Abstraction-Criation, Art non- Benezra, Neal 1). 7 In Murals genheim Museum Si 1
figuratif. Exhib. cat. Paris: and Sculptun ofjosej Albers. Solomon K. ( ruggenheim
Abstraction-Creation, [934. Outstanding Dissertations in Museum.
the Fine Arts \m York:
[bstraction-Creation, Art non- ( rarland Publishing, 1985. I l.i|os, 1 . M. "Berliner
Hguratif. Exhib. cat. Fans: Ausstellungen / orum,
Abstraction-Creation, 1936. Bill, Max. "Josef Albers." Zeitschrifi ftir Kunst-Bau- and
U erk (Winterthur) 45, no. 4 Einrichtung 1 Bratislava,
Albers, Josef. "Zu meinen (April 1958), pp. 135-38. Czechoslovakia) }, no. 11
Canada), no. 4 (Nov. 1964), Contemporanea. Josef Albi rs Hirshhorn Museum and
p. 22. Text by Getulio Alviani. Sculptun Garden, Smithsonian
Exhib. cat. ferrara: Comune Institution. New York: I larry
. Untitled statement di Ferrara, 1989. N. Abrams, [1974].
on the glass pictures, n.d.
Josef Albers Papers, vol. 2, Ehrlich, Doreen. Thi Loew, Mn hack "Albers:
SterlingMemorial Library, Bauhaus. London: Bison. [mpersonalization in Perfect
Manuscripts and Archives, 1991. Form.' Art News (New York)
Yale University, New 55 (April 1951''').
pp. 27-29.
Haven. In Irving Leonard Finkelstein, Irving Leonard. Review of exhibition at
Finkelstein, 1979. 'I In Lift and Art ofjosej New Haven, 1956.
Albers. Ann Arbor, Mich.:
"White Cross
. University Microfilms Lohse, Richard B. "Josef
Window," n.d. Archive of International, 1979. Albers: "City 1928.'" Ztircher
the Josef Albers Foundation, Kunstgesellschafi. Jahrt tbt richt
ipi/-ip/o. Ed. Sam Hunter. (Nov. 1958), pp. 14-15. Cat. London: Marlborough
Exhib. cat. Princeton: The Fine Art Ltd., [962
Art Museum, Princeton .Josej . \lbers. Trans.
University, 1971. Joyce Wittenborn. The Metropolitan Museum
Additional texts by Josef of An
Balabanoff, Doreen. "Josel Albers, Clara Diament dc Metropolitan Museum uf Art.
Albers: Works in Glass." Sujo, Will Grohmann, Text bj I lenry Geld/ahler.
I.uidlim Magazine (Toronto), Nbrbert Lynton, and Mi< In 1 1 xhib 1 .11 \i York: The
1994- Seuphor. New York: George Metropolitan Museum of
Josef Albers. Berlin: ( rrohmann, Will. "Josel tht Metropolis. Ed Jean ( lair.
Oellers, Adam. "Die Spies, Werner. Albers. Heard Hamilton. Exhib. cat.
Eigenstandigkeit der Modern Artists, ed. Werner New Haven: Yale University
modernen Glasmalerei." Die Spies. New York: Harry N. Art Gallery, 1956.
Waage (Aachen) 31, no. 4 Abrams, 1970.
(1992), pp. 168-73.
Staber, Margit. "Farbe und
Koh, Franz. Geschichte der Linie-Kunst und Erziehung:
deutscher Kunst von 1900 bis Zum Werk von Josef
der Gegenwart. Munich: Albers." Neue Grafik (Olten,
1'. Brudemann Verlag, 1958. Switzerland), nos. 1718
(Feb. 1965), pp. 54-69,
Rotzler, Willy. Constructive 140-42. (In English, Freru h,
John Wilmerding
Donald M. Wilson
William T. Ylvisaker
Peggy Guggenheim Peggy Guggenheim
Peggy Guggenheim Members
Collection Staff
Collection Advisory Board James Allman
Collection
Giuseppina Araldi Guinetti
President Alexander Bernstein Deputy Director
Peter Lawson-Johnston Mary Bloch Philip Rylands
Distributed by
Harry N. Abrams, Inc.
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