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Anni and Josef Albers - Art and Life
Julia Garimorth; Contributions by Vincent Broqua, Brenda Danilowitz, Judith Delfiner, Virginia Gardner Troy
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R935
Discovery Miles 9 350
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This career-spanning exhibition catalog reveals the enormous
artistic achievements-both individual and shared-of two of the
greatest pioneers of twentieth-century modernism. Featuring more
than two hundred and fifty works, including paintings, photographs,
drawings, textiles and furniture, this essential volume traces the
creative development of Josef and Anni Albers-both instrumental
figures in the development of modernism and abstract art.
Illustrated profusely throughout, this book features contributions
from leading experts in chapters exploring the couple's
relationship and important aspects of their professional
partnership, including their meeting at the Bauhaus School and
their influential years at Black Mountain College in North
Carolina. Wide-ranging essays examine topics such as the influence
of Pre-Colombian art; Josef's masterwork Homage to the Square;
Anni's jewelry and works on paper; Josef's famed classes at Yale
University; and Anni's years as a graphic designer after her
husband's death. Both artists are celebrated for their lasting
achievements in their respective fields-Josef for his color theory
classes at Yale, Anni for her innovative use of unconventional
materials. Readers will come away with an appreciation for the
Albers' experimentation and innovation; their collaboration and
teamwork; their dedication to education and mentorship; and the
many ways their work challenged
Mary Crovatt Hambidge (1885-1973) was an aspiring actress and a
professional whistler on Broadway when she met Canadian-born Jay
Hambidge (1867-1924), an artist, illustrator, and scholar. Their
relationship would prove to be both a romantic and an artistic
partnership. Jay Hambidge formulated his own artistic concept,
known as Dynamic Symmetry, which stipulated that the compositional
rules found in nature's symmetry should be applied to the creation
of art. Mary Hambidge pioneered new techniques of weaving and
dyeing fabric that merged Greek methods with Appalachian weaving
and spinning traditions. The Hambidge Center for Creative Arts and
Sciences, formed during the mid-1930s, provides an artists'
community situated on six hundred rural acres in the north Georgia
mountains where hundreds of visual artists, writers, potters,
composers, dancers, and other artists have pursued their crafts.
Dynamic Design details Jay Hambidge and Mary Crovatt Hambidge's
cross-cultural and cross-historical explorations and examines their
lasting contributions to twentieth-century art and cultural
history. Virginia Gardner Troy illustrates how Jay and Mary were
important independently and collectively, providing a wider
understanding of their lives within the larger context of late
nineteenth- and early twentieth-century art and design. They were
from two different worlds, nearly a generation apart in age, and
only together for ten years, but their lives intertwined at a
pivotal moment in their development. They shared parallel goals to
establish a place where they could integrate the arts and crafts
around the principles of Dynamic Symmetry. Troy explores how this
dynamic duo's ideas and artistic expressions have resonated with
admirers throughout the decades and reflect the trends and
complexities of American culture through various waves of
cosmopolitanism, utopianism, nationalism, and isolationism. The
Hambidges' prolific partnership and forward-thinking vision
continue to aid and inspire generations of aspiring artists and
artisans.
One woman's influential contribution to modernism, achieved through
a fascinating revival of tapestry Marie Cuttoli (1879-1973) lived
in Algeria and Paris in the 1920s and collected the work of
avant-garde artists such as Georges Braque, Joan Miro, and Pablo
Picasso. In the ensuing decades, she went on to revive the French
tapestry tradition and to popularize it as a modernist medium. This
catalogue traces Cuttoli's career, beginning with her work in
fashion and interiors under her label Myrbor. She subsequently
commissioned artists including Braque, Le Corbusier, Fernand Leger,
Man Ray, Miro, and Picasso to design cartoons to be woven at
Aubusson, a center of tapestry production since the 17th century.
Today these cartoons-paintings and collages by canonical
artists-are often understood as autonomous works of art, but this
catalogue uncovers their original purpose as textile designs.
Beautifully illustrated with rarely exhibited works by giants of
European modernism, Marie Cuttoli reveals the significant
contributions of a shrewd and visionary woman as well as the role
of the decorative arts in the development of the movement.
Distributed for the Barnes Foundation Exhibition Schedule: The
Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia (February 23-August 23, 2020)
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