Black-White-Red

Description

In 1919 textile designer Anni Albers began her career in the renowned weaving workshop at the Bauhaus art school, where students were taught techniques geared toward industrial design and mass production. Alber's work reflects her interest in modernist abstraction inspired by theories of mathematical repetition. For this fabric, she created a triple weave that layers black threads over cream and red, producing a vibrating grid of lines, blocks, and striped units, with no identical rows.

Provenance

The artist; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1970.

Black-White-Red

Anni Albers

Designed 1926/27, woven 1965

Accession Number

88985

Medium

Silk and cotton, plain weave double cloth of paired warps and wefts

Dimensions

179.4 × 122.2 cm (70 5/8 × 48 1/8 in.)

Classification

textile

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Purchased with funds provided by Mrs. Julian Armstrong, Jr.