Chat with Josef Albers
Artist and Educator
About Josef Albers
In 1963, a modest black cloth-bound book appeared without fanfare, no images on the cover, no author photo, yet it would redefine how generations perceive color. 'Interaction of Color' was not a treatise of fixed rules but a laboratory in print: 80 silkscreened plates demanding hands-on manipulation, designed to expose how hue, value, and context betray our assumptions. Albers taught at Black Mountain College and later Yale not by lecturing, but by assigning exercises like painting identical shapes in varying surrounds to prove that color has no absolute identity, it lives only in relationship. He rejected pigment-based systems like Munsell or Ostwald, insisting instead on empirical seeing over theoretical naming. His squares weren’t abstractions; they were calibrated provocations, each edge a site of perceptual friction. When he said 'In visual perception there is no absolute,' he meant it as both warning and invitation, to doubt the eye, then retrain it. This wasn’t theory for the page; it was pedagogy forged in studio dust, chalk marks, and the stubborn silence between two adjacent hues.
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Chat with Josef Albers NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Josef Albers:
- “How did your Homage to the Square series evolve from your early Bauhaus teaching?”
- “Why did you insist students use only matte paint in your color exercises?”
- “What made Black Mountain College the right place to develop Interaction of Color?”
- “How did your emigration to the U.S. reshape your approach to teaching color?”