Description: Except for one buyer who was trying to scam the ebay system, I have a 100% positive feedback rating.This auction is for a Josef Albers limited-edition serigraph, (653 / 1000), of his well-known works in the double portfolio called “Formulation: Articulation” This is a double print from Portfolio 1, Folder 16, prints 1 & 2. The subjects are commonly known as the Treble-Clef. The Formulation: Articulation series is a rare portfolio spanning forty years of Albers’s best work, selected by the artist himself, first issued in 1972. Each serigraph depicts many of the artist’s main concerns in art creation, including perception of color and spatial geometry. These are printed on Mohawk superfine paper by Harry N. Abrams and Ives-Sillman, and framed by a white mat. The printing of the portfolio was considered a technical achievement in printing quality at the time. Origin: USA, purchased from “kd3 decorative arts” 4 Apr 2009, Lot #363 Period: 1972 Folio 1 Folder 16-1 (Gry background, light grey top, light grey belly) Folio 1 Folder 16-2 (Blk background, grey top, white belly) Print Paper: 20 x 15 in Visible Image: 16 x 12 in Mat opening: 17-3/4 x 14-1/4 in Mat perimeter: 23-3/4 x 20-3/8 in About the Artist: Josef Albers (19 Mar 1888 – 25 Mar 1976) was a German-born artist and educator who worked both in Europe and in the United States. He was the first living artist to be given a solo show at Museum of Modern Art (MoMa) and at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. He worked in multiple visual disciplines beyond just painting: murals, printmaking, typography, design, and photography. His comfort in varied realms stemmed partially from his upbringing by a housepainter/carpenter/handyman father and a mother from a family of blacksmiths, as well as the general philosophies espoused at the Bauhaus schools, that attempted to bring together all the arts, (Gesamtkunstwerk.) As a teacher he was at the Bauhaus, Black Mountain College, and Yale, where he headed the Department of Design, and is considered one of the most influential teachers of the visual arts in the 20th century with his far-reaching education programs and artistic movements. He has been cited as having a crucial role in developing the Bauhaus, with his innovations in Geometric Abstraction and his explorations into the subjective experience of color. But he is best known for his abstract painting work like this piece. (More below.) Terms: -Items not paid for in 3 calendar days invoke an eBay unpaid item alert. -Item will be relisted if payment not received in 3 days of auction close. -Check your shipping address. Not responsible for items shipped to an incorrect address. -We only ship inside the Continental US; no international shipping. -Unless otherwise stated/agreed, all items are shipped via USPS Mail.-Insurance included in handling charge -Returns not accepted. Josef Albers FORMULATION : ARTICULATION by Gerald NordlandJosef Albers was the one artist who taught more courses in more different departments, over a longer time period, than any other master-teacher at the legendary Bauhaus art school. He had become a professional teacher in public schools before he enrolled at the Bauhaus in 1920, to do advanced work in the abstract stained glass medium. Albers believed that one's individuality comes to speak in its own accent only after the fundamental disciplines have been mastered and the artist has come to terms with himself and what he has to say. When Johannes Itten (1888-1967) was dismissed at the Bauhaus, Albers was asked to teach Preliminary Design and then Color in the Bauhaus' Foundation Course. He based his teachings on his own experience and clarified his means by laboratory assignments to his students, in order to provide practical underpinning for the school's curriculum. Ultimately he carried his researches and his teaching methods to the United States and influenced color training all over the world through his two-volume text, The Interaction of Color. His research in color affected his studio work and such successive series -- Treble Clef, Variants on a Theme and Homage to the Square, which have established his place in 20th century art history. Albers was keenly aware that most often there are no words capable of expressing the realities of visual art experiences. Yet he spent years at the Bauhaus, Black Mountain and Yale University presenting his problems to students in such a way that they could only find release by discovering new solutions through pragmatic experiment. In order to present his ideas he found it necessary to invent a new vocabulary, to develop a ladder of experimental problems that could serve as a progressive stimulus to the eyes and minds of his students. Formulation : Articulation, published in 1972, is the artist's fullest documentation of the visual exercises of his art pedagogy. The album is not an exhibition of his art but an embodiment of his experience. It is not printed, but rendered by original silk screen process, conveying the precise color experience of the artist's color statement. Sometimes accused of Germanic dogmatism, Albers was astonishingly open, saying: "There is never only one solution in art. Life is change..." and "When you really understand that each color is changed by a changed environment, you eventually find that you have learned about life as well as about color."The purpose of his color studies was to prove that color is the most relative medium in art, and that we almost never perceive what color is physically. He called the mutual influencing of colors interaction. He taught us that our optical reception can be turned inside out, so that we see opaque colors as transparent, and perceive opacity as translucence. Albers compelled his students to learn to see again, and to be questioning of their vision. He pointed out that color offers uncertainties and "perceptual ambiguities" where three colors can be made to look like four or like two, by changing their color environments. "Each color has different properties both as color and as buttery paste. Each has a different density; in spite of this, I want them all to behave; to do what I want and not what they want... One must taste and taste in order to cook just right... Until one has the experience of knowing he is being fooled by color, one cannot be expected to be very careful to look at things inquiringly. Only comparison entitles one to evaluation... I want to imbue others with my delight in the endless possibilities for new color experiences."
Price: 455 USD
Location: Simpsonville, South Carolina
End Time: 2025-01-16T02:00:01.000Z
Shipping Cost: 18.1 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Artist: Josef Albers
Production Technique: Serigraph
Style: Bauhaus
Time Period Produced: 1970-1979
Type: Print
Features: Limited Edition
Subject: Music G Clefs