The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao opens an in-depth survey of seven decades in the career of Anni Albers
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The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao opens an in-depth survey of seven decades in the career of Anni Albers
Anni Albers, Knot, 1947, 43.2 × 51 cm. Gouache on paper. The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation, Bethany CT. Photo: Tim Nighswander/Imaging4Art © The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2017.



BILBAO.- The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao is presenting Anni Albers: Touching Vision, an in-depth survey of seven decades in the career of a pioneering figure in the field of Fiber Art. Organized in collaboration with The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation, the show provides a chronological overview of Albers’s oeuvre while also revealing the connections between different periods and series, highlighting recurrent motifs and flashing ideas. Also emphasized are the compelling ways in which a deep insight of materials and techniques preceded visual development in many instances of Albers’s work.

The life of Anni Albers (b. 1899, Berlin; d. 1994, Orange, Connecticut) was marked by an intimate relationship with the materials and mediums that guided her work. Best known for her pioneering role in the field of Fiber Art, her innovative treatment of warp and weft, and her constant quest for new patterns and uses of fabric, Albers was instrumental in redefining the role of the artist as a designer. Her art was inspired by pre-Columbian arts and modern industry, and transcended conventional notions of craftsmanship and gender-specific labor.

Anni Albers studied at the avant-garde Bauhaus in Weimar, where she met her husband, the painter Josef Albers. Accepted as a student in 1922, she eventually became director of the school’s weaving workshop in 1931. After the institution was closed by the Nazi party in 1933, the Alberses moved to North Carolina, where they were both hired to teach at a free-form school that would become a benchmark of modern American art, Black Mountain College. There Anni Albers continued to combine her educational activity with artistic experimentation, while also authoring texts that are now considered to be seminal in the history of contemporary textile art. After showing her wall hangings and pictorial weavings in numerous solo exhibitions (MoMA in New York and other American museums between 1949 and 1953, and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1959), in 1963 Albers began to explore different techniques and processes in printmaking.

Albers discovered a new field of investigation in the wide range of printing practices, and by the late 1960s she had abandoned weaving altogether to focus on this new interest. Screenprints, etchings, lithographs, and offset prints gave the artist a new means of developing visual concepts that had already surfaced in many preparatory drawings for earlier fiber pieces. In printmaking, she found the ideal vehicle for testing new compositional patterns and exploring their almost infinite variations.

In the following decades, and until the end of her career, Anni Albers collaborated with various textile manufacturing companies and workshops in an attempt to make her designs available to a larger number of people, thus reaffirming her commitment to the guiding principle of the Bauhaus: to view art and design as a single field, and produce prototypes that would facilitate an egalitarian distribution of artistic forms.

OVERVIEW OF THE EXHIBITION

Gallery 305

This first gallery features works ranging from Albers’s time at the Bauhaus to her Black Mountain College years. The Bauhaus period is represented by a selection of preparatory drawings for textile works and key examples of her research for new weaving patterns and functional textiles. On the visual level, this gallery illustrates the progressive transformation of predominantly orthogonal motifs from her early years (1920s and 1930s) toward freer compositions and the artist’s distancing from geometric abstraction.

Albers’s presence in the American art world, her involvement in the dialogues that defined modernism in the middle of the century, and her trips to Mexico, Cuba, and Peru with Josef Albers (where they gathered many of the pre-Columbian artifacts that inspired her creations) were accompanied by an increasing openness to experimental abstraction. This led to new motifs in her work that alternately evoked landscapes ( La Luz ) or returned to abstract composition in spontaneous ways ( With Verticals ). In addition, this gallery presents a selection of the jewelry collaboratively designed by Albers at Black Mountain College—another example of the spirit of experimentation that pervaded this unique institution, considered to be the epitome of creative freedom and cooperation among artists during its time.

Gallery 306
After leaving Black Mountain College, Anni moved with Josef to the New Haven area in Connecticut. There she produced many of her mature works and set down her textile theories in writings that are now considered fundamental for the understanding of Fiber Art. Consequently, this gallery contains selected sketches, diagrams, and photographs associated with Albers’s theoretical work. Her ideas were condensed in the seminal volume On Weaving , first published in 1965; a new expanded edition in Spanish and English from Princeton University Press and the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao will accompany this exhibition.

Gallery 306 also presents a large number of pictorial weavings, unique pieces that reinterpret the ancient tradition of tapestries in a modern, abstract language and illustrate the formal perfection of Albers’s treatment of warp and weft. In these woven works of art, Albers appropriated the preoccupations of modern and abstract painting and transferred them to the ancient, essential terrain of textile production. This gallery also contains the work that signaled the end of Albers’s weaving period, Epitaph .

Gallery 307
In the late 1960s, Albers focused all of her energy on investigating different printing practices, primarily screenprints, lithographs, and offset printing. Her quest for greater degrees of graphic complexity that linked drawing to densely woven fibers gave rise to such series as Domberger, where mingling triangle and diamond patterns prompt a hyperactive viewing experience. These forms alternate with other works dominated by intricate curved lines, reminiscent of mazes, knots and tangled threads. Sometimes these designs were translated into mass-produced textile creations, made in collaboration with various manufacturers—a practice which the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation has continued after the artist’s passing, in accordance with her wishes.

The parallels between the industrialization of textile products and printed objects and the possibilities of democratizing the art object and erasing the boundary between art and design are evident in this final period. Indeed, the Connections print series is presented as a concise synopsis of the major visual milestones in Albers’s oeuvre. In every case, we see Albers’s tactile and touching vision, her peaceful humanism, and her quest for purity in ideas and clarity in execution.










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