Product Details
- Publisher: Thames and Hudson (2018-11-20)
- Language: English
- Paperback: 400 pages
- ISBN-13: 9780500519103
- Item Weight: 1054.62 grams
- Dimensions: 9.7 x 6.9 x 1.43 cm
The first full-scale
biography of the great
20th-century artist,
craftsman, and thinker
Josef Albers, whose
influence is still felt today.
Drawing on extensive unpublished archival writings, documents, and illustrations, this is the first full-scale biography of one of the 20th-century’s great artists.
In his accessible study of the “whole” Albers, Charles Darwent combats the fables while telling the fascinating story of an artist, friend, and intellectual.
Among Albers’s unpublished papers are letters from friends John Cage, Robert Rauschenberg, Richard Serra, and Eva Hesse, as well as fans and collectors ranging from the composer Virgil Thomson to the cartoonist Saul Steinberg. If his network of influence was surprisingly wide, so too, were his interests. He started life at the Bauhaus as a glass-maker and went on to create fonts, to run their famous wallpaper workshop, and to make furniture whose designs are still in production eighty years later. He pioneered the study of color at Black Mountain College in North Carolina, and chaired the design department at Yale University. While books have been written about Albers for specialist audiences, this new volume fulfills the clear need for a more general study.
About the Author
Charles Darwent is a writer and regular contributor to The Guardian, the Art Newspaper, Apollo, and the Times Literary Supplement and was the Independent on Sunday’s chief art critic from 1999 to 2013. His biography Josef Albers: Life and Work was described by Tate Modern director Frances Morris as “lively, lucid, compelling and revealing.”