What was Josef Albers philosophy?

Josef Albers believed that teaching art was not a matter of imparting rules, styles, or techniques, but of leading students to a greater awareness of what they were seeing.

What was Josef Albers known for?

Josef Albers, (born March 19, 1888, Bottrop, Ger. —died March 25, 1976, New Haven, Conn., U.S.), painter, poet, sculptor, teacher, and theoretician of art, important as an innovator of such styles as Colour Field painting and Op art.

What art movement does Josef Albers fall into?

Geometric abstraction

Josef Albers
Known for Abstract painting, study of color
Notable work Homage to the Square (series) The Graphic Constructions of Josef Albers (1969) First solo exhibition given to a living artist, MoMa, New York
Movement Geometric abstraction
Spouse(s) Anni Albers ​ ( m. 1925)​

What did Josef Albers use to create his art?

Albers would prime masonite, a type of hardboard, then divide the painting vertically and paint just one side before completing the whole picture. He used oil paint straight from the tube and applied it with a palette knife, ensuring there were no “expressive” brush marks.

What did Josef Albers teach?

Albers studied art in Essen and Munich before entering the Bauhaus in Weimar in 1920. There, he initially concentrated on glass painting, and in 1929, as a journeyman, he reorganized the glass workshop. In 1923, he began to teach the Vorkurs, a basic design course.

What inspired Albers?

Inspired by the shape and colors of Oaxacan houses, Albers produced paintings of three or four radiant colors — shades of blues, purples, oranges — resembling their bright walls and shutterless windows.

What is color deception in art?

Practical exercises demonstrate through color deception (illusion) the relativity and instability of color. And experience teaches that in visual perception there is a discrepancy between physical fact and psychic effect.

Who did Albers teach?

He taught at the school along with other prominent 20th-century artists such as Wassily Kandinsky and Paul Klee.