Sale: 451 / Post War I, June 10. 2017 in Munich Lot 807

 

807
Josef Albers
Squares: Blue and Cobalt Green in Cadmium Green, 1958.
Oil on fibreboard
Estimate:
€ 150,000 / $ 162,000
Sold:
€ 187,500 / $ 202,500

(incl. surcharge)
Squares: Blue and Cobalt Green in Cadmium Green. 1958.
Oil on fibreboard.
Lower right monogrammed and dated. Verso signed, dated, titled and inscribed. 40.5 x 40.5 cm (15.9 x 15.9 in).
Verso with gallery and shipping labels as well as various inscriptions. [CB].

With a written expertise from Nicholas Fox Weber, The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation, Bethany, Connecticut, from 23 March, 2017.
The work is registered in the archive of the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation, Connecticut, under "JAAF 1958.1.62" and will be included into the forthcoming catalog raisonné.

PROVENANCE: Collection Professor Eugen Gomringer (born in 1925), acquired directly from the artist.
Collection Branco Weiss (1929-2010), Zürich.
Galerie Gimpel & Hanover, Zürich.
Galerie István Schlégl, Zürich (verso with a label).
Private possession Munich (acquired from aforementioned in 1984, with a copy of the invoice).



Our work from the iconic series “Homage to the Square“, which Joseph Albers was occupied with between 1949 and his death in 1976, shows a lucent color triad of a deep blue, a dark cobalt green and a light cadmium green. The work's title illustrates Albers' minimalistic approach. Besides the reduced form of the square, the artist only employs pure colors pressed directly from the paint tube. For his famous series the former Bauhaus student developed four basic patters of three or four squares of different sizes, their center point located on the same vertical central axis. The picture's surface arrangement appears to be mathematically exact and of equal power. However, to Albers the square constellations are just the framework for his actual artistic impulse: to him it is about the exploration of the interdependency of color and form and their position in context of other ancillary colors. Albers' finding that color is no absolute value but that it has to be perceived in context of its surroundings is the fundamental assumption for the analysis. In our work the lucent blue in the center and the bright light green on the outside seem to emerge from the surface owed to the contrast with the darker cobalt green between them. This leads to clear spatial effect on the two-dimensional image carrier. Surface turns to space and vice versa.



807
Josef Albers
Squares: Blue and Cobalt Green in Cadmium Green, 1958.
Oil on fibreboard
Estimate:
€ 150,000 / $ 162,000
Sold:
€ 187,500 / $ 202,500

(incl. surcharge)