Josef Albers, influential German artist and educator, is renowned for his pioneering work in abstract art and color theory. As a leading figure of the Bauhaus movement, Albers's innovative approach to form and color continues to influence generations of artists and designers, shaping the course of modern art history.

"Any ground subtracts its own hue from the colors which it carries and therefore influences."


18

"I was at the Royal Art School. That was a preparatory school specially for art teachers. You see, it was not so much for the development of artists. But we had there terribly stiff training."



"Instead of art I have taught philosophy. Though technique for me is a big word, I never have taught how to paint. All my doing was to make people to see."



"It was my family that wanted me to be a teacher. That was safe, you see. To be a painter was terrible."



"Traditionally art is to create and not to revive. To revive: leave that to the historians, who are looking backward."



"The aim of our studies is to prove that color is the most relative means of artistic expression, that we never really perceive what color is physically."


1

"In visual perception a color is almost never seen as it really is - as it physically is. This fact makes color the most relative medium in art."


1

"I've handled colour as a man should behave. You may conclude that I consider ethics and aesthetics as one."


2

"It is not so for art in appreciation because art is concerned with human behavior. And science is concerned with the behavior of metal or energy. It depends on what the fashion is. Now today it's energy. It's the same soul behind it. The same soul, you see."



"When we were in the seminary we got a stipend direct from the government and for that stipend we had an obligation to stick to our teaching job for five years."

