Josef Albers & Richard Anuszkiewicz | A Vivid Vision

Josef Albers & Richard Anuszkiewicz | A Vivid Vision

Josef Albers & Richard Anuszkiewicz | A Vivid Vision

 

EXHIBITION: April 3 - May 31

OPENING: First Thursday, April 3, 6-8pm

 

View Exhibition Preview here

 

 

Josef Albers, Portfolio II, Folder 27. Serigraph.

Josef Albers, Portfolio II, Folder 27. Serigraph

 

Davidson Galleries is pleased to present Vivid Vision, opening Thursday April 3rd. Josef Albers and Richard Anuszkiewicz both explored printmaking as an accessible medium for abstract art. They followed the Bauhaus belief that art and design should be simple and accessible to all people. It is this vision that they developed in conversation and independently that we appreciate in vivid color.


Josef Albers, Portfolio II, Folder 8. Serigraph
Josef Albers, Portfolio II, Folder 8. Serigraph

 

“Every perception of colour is an illusion, we do not see colours as they really are. In our perception they alter one another.” –Josef Albers

 

Josef Albers, Portfolio I, Folder 31. Serigraph.
Josef Albers, Portfolio I, Folder 31. Serigraph.

 

Albers and Anuszkiewicz are bold artists who brought colors together to play with each other on paper and with our eyes. Albers was a prolific teacher and Anuszkiewicz was one of his many students who would rise to fame of his own. Known as the Father of Color, Albers’ described his approach to teaching as philosophical, rather than literal: “Instead of art I have taught philosophy. Though technique for me is a big word, I never have taught how to paint. All my doing was to make people to see.”

Richard Anuszkiewicz, IV. Serigraph

Richard Anuszkiewicz, IV. Serigraph

 

At Yale in the 1950s, Anuszkiewicz was highly influenced by Albers’ approach to color and simplified design, allowing the artworks to reveal the power of color to the viewer with minimal interference. However, it wasn’t until after Anuszkiewicz left Yale that he developed his signature style, focusing on the square, which Albers had claimed as “my shape.” Albers frequently discouraged his students from copying the square, but Anuszkiewicz would take his exploration in a surprising new direction and become known as a pioneer of Op art (optical art) on his own.

Richard Anuszkiewicz, IV (detail). Serigraph

Richard Anuszkiewicz, IV (detail). Serigraph

 

“There’s no reason why a set of colors or abstract shapes cannot convey feelings even stronger than a piece of realism. One can deal with visual symbols more easily if not restricted to familiar imagery. There’s no reason why an abstraction can’t remind you of a sunset or eclipse or any condition, any human condition.” –Richard Anuszkiewicz

Richard Anuszkiewicz, III. Serigraph
Richard Anuszkiewicz, III. Serigraph

Please join us to view these works at our gallery, 85 Yesler Way, on Thursday April 3rd from 6 –8pm or online at davidsongalleries.com.

Josef Albers, Portfolio I, Folder 26. Serigraph.

Josef Albers, Portfolio I, Folder 26. Serigraph.

 

 

Josef Albers (American, 1888 - 1976) was born in 1888 in Bottrop, Germany, a coal-mining city. He learned skills like engraving glass, plumbing, wiring, house-painting, and other crafts from his father who was a general contractor. Albers worked as a school teacher for young children from 1908 to 1913. His role as a teacher exempted him from military service during  WWI. He moved to Munich in 1919 and arrived at the Weimar Bauhaus in 1920, the year after its founding. Albers studied at the Bauhaus and later taught alongside his wife, Anni. Josef worked in carpentry, metalwork, glass, photography, and graphic design. In 1933, the Berlin Bauhaus was forced to close by the Nazis and the Albers moved to America to teach at the new, revolutionary Black Mountain College in North Carolina. In 1950, Albers became the chairman of the Department of Design at Yale where he taught until his retirement in 1958. He continued making work, in particular at printshops and in the private studio that he shared with Anni. Albers passed away in New Haven in 1976. 

Albers is considered one of the most influential art teachers in the United States and a key contributor to the modern and abstract arts movements internationally as a member of the Bauhaus. In particular, he is best known for the Homage to the Square series and development of color theory. He is also well known for his collaborators, co-educators and students, including teaching with Wassily Kandinsky and Paul Klee at the Bauhaus, teaching to Robert Rauschenberg, Cy Twombly, Ruth Asawa, Robert Rauschenberg, and Jacob Lawrence at Black Mountain College, and to Richard Anuszkiewicz and Eva Hesse at Yale, to name a few. 

Featured artist: Josef Albers

 

Richard Anusziewicz, VIII. Serigraph.

Richard Anusziewicz, VIII. Serigraph

 

 

Richard Anuszkiewicz (American, 1930 - 2020) was born in Erie, Pennsylvania in 1930 as the child of Polish immigrants. Anuszkiewicz received a BFA from the Cleveland Institute of Art in 1953 and won a Pulitzer Traveling Fellowship which he used to study with Josef Albers at Yale, where he received his MFA in 1955. He also received a BS in Education from Kent State University in 1956. In 1957, Anuszkiewicz moved to New York and worked on restoration at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He worked on commercial design projects and in public art while making works for exhibitions, including a solo show in 1955 and 1960. His work was featured in key exhibitions on geometric art and in publications in the 1960s, securing a place as a member of the American Op art (optical art) movement. Anuszkiewicz developed an interest in printmaking, specifically screenprints, in the early 1960s and they became a large part of his practice. He continued experimenting with color, form, and pattern while working in his home studio in New Jersey until his passing in 2020.

Anuszkiewicz is best known for a technique that he called "color performance." He described color as the most important factor in his work: "the image in my work has always been determined by what I wanted the color to do. Color function becomes my subject matter, and its performance is my painting."

Featured artist: Richard Anusziewicz

 

 Josef Albers & Richard Anuszkiewicz | A Vivid Vision

EXHIBITION: April 3, 2025 - May 31, 2025

OPENING IN-PERSON: First Thursday, April 3, 6-8 pm

View Exhibition Preview here