Intersecting Colors: Josef Albers and His Contemporaries

Intersecting Colors: Josef Albers and His Contemporaries

Intersecting Colors: Josef Albers and His Contemporaries

Intersecting Colors: Josef Albers and His Contemporaries

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Overview

Josef Albers (1888–1976) was an artist, teacher, and seminal thinker on the perception of color. A member of the Bauhaus who fled to the U.S. in 1933, his ideas about how the mind understands color influenced generations of students, inspired countless artists, and anticipated the findings of neuroscience in the latter half of the twentieth century. With contributions from the disciplines of art history, the intellectual and cultural significance of Gestalt psychology, and neuroscience, Intersecting Colors offers a timely reappraisal of the immense impact of Albers’s thinking, writing, teaching, and art on generations of students. It shows the formative influence on his work of non-scientific approaches to color (notably the work of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe) and the emergence of Gestalt psychology in the first decades of the twentieth century. The work also shows how much of Albers’s approach to color—dismissed in its day by a scientific approach to the study and taxonomy of color driven chiefly by industrial and commercial interests—ultimately anticipated what neuroscience now reveals about how we perceive this most fundamental element of our visual experience. Edited by Vanja Malloy, with contributions from Brenda Danilowitz, Sarah Lowengard, Karen Koehler, Jeffrey Saletnik, and Susan R. Barry.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781943208012
Publisher: Amherst College Press
Publication date: 09/10/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 108
Sales rank: 443,370
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Vanja Malloy is the curator of American art at the Mead Art Museum at Amherst College and the organizing editor and curator of Intersecting Colors. She has a longstanding research interest in the intersections of art and science and earned her Ph.D. at the Courtauld Institute of Art for her dissertation, "Rethinking Alexander Calder: Astronomy, Relativity, and Psychology."

Table of Contents

Contents Foreword | David E. Little Introduction | Vanja Malloy A Short History of Josef Albers’s Interaction of Color | Brenda Danilowitz Explaining Color in Two 1963 Publications | Sarah Lowengard More Than Parallel Lines: Thoughts on Gestalt, Albers, and the Bauhaus | Karen Koehler Juxtapositions and Constellations: Albers and Op Art | Jeffrey Saletnik Josef Albers and the Science of Seeing | Susan R. Barry Contributors Exhibition Checklist
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