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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 18

Josef Albers

Schätzpreis
300.000 £ - 400.000 £
ca. 391.957 $ - 522.609 $
Zuschlagspreis:
345.000 £
ca. 450.750 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 18

Josef Albers

Schätzpreis
300.000 £ - 400.000 £
ca. 391.957 $ - 522.609 $
Zuschlagspreis:
345.000 £
ca. 450.750 $
Beschreibung:

Josef Albers Follow Study for Homage for the Square; Sel: E. B. 4 signed with the artist’s monogram and dated ‘59’ lower right; further signed, titled, numbered, inscribed and dated ‘Albers “Study for Homage for the Square; Sel: E. B. 4” 1959’ on the reverse oil on Masonite, in artist's frame 40 x 40 cm (15 3/4 x 15 3/4 in.) Painted in 1959, this painting will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné of the work of Josef Albers currently being prepared by the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation and is registered under no. JAAF 1959.1.92.
Provenance Galerie Beyeler, Basel Private Collection Exhibited Basel, Galerie Beyeler, ALBERS , March – April 1973, no. 16, n.p. (illustrated) Catalogue Essay ‘They all are of different palettes, and, therefore, so to speak, of different climates. Choice of the colours used, as well as their order, is aimed at an interaction - influencing and changing each other forth and back. Thus, character and feeling alter from painting to painting without any additional ‘hand writing’ or, so-called, texture. Though the underlying symmetrical and quasi-concentric order of squares remains the same in all paintings – in proportion and placement – these same squares group or single themselves, connect and separate in many different ways’ (Josef Albers quoted in Nicholas Fox Weber, ‘The Artist as Alchemist’, Josef Albers A Retrospective , exh. cat., Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, 1988, p. 14). Masterful in its geometry and form, Study for Homage for the Square; Sel: E. B. 4 is an exceptional example of Josef Albers’ command of colour and visual language. Initially criticised by the likes of Clement Greenberg and Donald Judd Albers’ works from the iconic Homage to the Square series have become enshrined within the art historical canon as hallmarks for the interaction of colour and form. Study for Homage for the Square; Sel: E. B. 4 , which was exhibited alongside other works from the series at Galerie Beyeler, Basel, in 1973, is composed of carefully aligned geometric squares and gleams with Albers’ mastery of a colour. The optical effects of the exquisite colour combination radiate from the simplicity of form, expertly illustrating the artist’s notion that adjustments to placement, shape and light significantly alter ones perception of colour. Presenting the viewer with a vivid structure of yellow and grey, three tonal bands are skilfully aligned within the composition. Carefully harmonised, the colours evolve downwards; diverging vertically, the interaction of tone and form within the squares instills depth, weight and movement into the composition. Shrewdly documenting his precise and innovative use of colour, later to be broken down in his published writings, the present work refers to the artist’s use of Reddish Naples Yellow, Cadmium Yellow and Gray #7. Albers’ fine calculation is evident beyond the exact pairing of colour, the pristinely worked surface leaving the viewer’s gaze absolutely focused on the chromatic impression. Albers’ lifelong obsession with colour theory, the nature of perception and the psychological effects of colour within space, culminated in his most celebrated series of works, Homage to the Square . From the series, which occupied the final 26 years of the artists life, Study for Homage for the Square; Sel: E. B. 4 beautifully presents the viewer with the pillars of Albers’ pedagogic practice. The composition celebrates the principles of his instruction, from the Bauhaus to Black Mountain College and Yale, the Farbenlehre and Formlehre (colour course and form course), to observation, representation and composition, encompassing theories of space, colour and design. The present work, emblematic of Albers’ teachings, reveals ‘on the one hand the intuitive search for and discovery of form; on the other hand the knowledge and application of the fundamental laws of form…’ (George Heard Hampton, Josef Albers Paintings, Prints, Projects , New Haven, 1956, p. 23). Albers’ immense legacy is evident through the creative output of subsequent artistic generations. In his expressive use and mastery of the varying potential of vibrant colour, imparted through his instruction at Black Mountain College, Kenneth Noland’s series of geometric canvases with a single motif recall Albers’ treatment of his Homage to the Square works. In 1963, Albers published his Interaction of Colour , a tome composed of text and silkscreen plates based on his colour course. This volume, outlining his philosophies on the intensity, relativi

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 18
Auktion:
Datum:
06.10.2017
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

Josef Albers Follow Study for Homage for the Square; Sel: E. B. 4 signed with the artist’s monogram and dated ‘59’ lower right; further signed, titled, numbered, inscribed and dated ‘Albers “Study for Homage for the Square; Sel: E. B. 4” 1959’ on the reverse oil on Masonite, in artist's frame 40 x 40 cm (15 3/4 x 15 3/4 in.) Painted in 1959, this painting will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné of the work of Josef Albers currently being prepared by the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation and is registered under no. JAAF 1959.1.92.
Provenance Galerie Beyeler, Basel Private Collection Exhibited Basel, Galerie Beyeler, ALBERS , March – April 1973, no. 16, n.p. (illustrated) Catalogue Essay ‘They all are of different palettes, and, therefore, so to speak, of different climates. Choice of the colours used, as well as their order, is aimed at an interaction - influencing and changing each other forth and back. Thus, character and feeling alter from painting to painting without any additional ‘hand writing’ or, so-called, texture. Though the underlying symmetrical and quasi-concentric order of squares remains the same in all paintings – in proportion and placement – these same squares group or single themselves, connect and separate in many different ways’ (Josef Albers quoted in Nicholas Fox Weber, ‘The Artist as Alchemist’, Josef Albers A Retrospective , exh. cat., Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, 1988, p. 14). Masterful in its geometry and form, Study for Homage for the Square; Sel: E. B. 4 is an exceptional example of Josef Albers’ command of colour and visual language. Initially criticised by the likes of Clement Greenberg and Donald Judd Albers’ works from the iconic Homage to the Square series have become enshrined within the art historical canon as hallmarks for the interaction of colour and form. Study for Homage for the Square; Sel: E. B. 4 , which was exhibited alongside other works from the series at Galerie Beyeler, Basel, in 1973, is composed of carefully aligned geometric squares and gleams with Albers’ mastery of a colour. The optical effects of the exquisite colour combination radiate from the simplicity of form, expertly illustrating the artist’s notion that adjustments to placement, shape and light significantly alter ones perception of colour. Presenting the viewer with a vivid structure of yellow and grey, three tonal bands are skilfully aligned within the composition. Carefully harmonised, the colours evolve downwards; diverging vertically, the interaction of tone and form within the squares instills depth, weight and movement into the composition. Shrewdly documenting his precise and innovative use of colour, later to be broken down in his published writings, the present work refers to the artist’s use of Reddish Naples Yellow, Cadmium Yellow and Gray #7. Albers’ fine calculation is evident beyond the exact pairing of colour, the pristinely worked surface leaving the viewer’s gaze absolutely focused on the chromatic impression. Albers’ lifelong obsession with colour theory, the nature of perception and the psychological effects of colour within space, culminated in his most celebrated series of works, Homage to the Square . From the series, which occupied the final 26 years of the artists life, Study for Homage for the Square; Sel: E. B. 4 beautifully presents the viewer with the pillars of Albers’ pedagogic practice. The composition celebrates the principles of his instruction, from the Bauhaus to Black Mountain College and Yale, the Farbenlehre and Formlehre (colour course and form course), to observation, representation and composition, encompassing theories of space, colour and design. The present work, emblematic of Albers’ teachings, reveals ‘on the one hand the intuitive search for and discovery of form; on the other hand the knowledge and application of the fundamental laws of form…’ (George Heard Hampton, Josef Albers Paintings, Prints, Projects , New Haven, 1956, p. 23). Albers’ immense legacy is evident through the creative output of subsequent artistic generations. In his expressive use and mastery of the varying potential of vibrant colour, imparted through his instruction at Black Mountain College, Kenneth Noland’s series of geometric canvases with a single motif recall Albers’ treatment of his Homage to the Square works. In 1963, Albers published his Interaction of Colour , a tome composed of text and silkscreen plates based on his colour course. This volume, outlining his philosophies on the intensity, relativi

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 18
Auktion:
Datum:
06.10.2017
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
London
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