Los Angeles Times

Tributes to Anni Albers have been woven in

- By Leah Ollman

If there were any justice in this world, those hearing the name Albers would ask “which one?” rather than assume a reference to Josef, the painter, color theorist and influentia­l teacher.

The other Albers — Anni (1899-1994) — hasn’t occupied as much of the art historical limelight, for the maddeningl­y usual reasons: She was a woman, and she worked in a medium historical­ly associated with craft and utility more than art.

When Albers enrolled at the Bauhaus in 1922, where she met future husband Josef, she was steered from painting toward weaving.

She proceeded to reinvent and vitalize the field through her work, writing and teaching, all of which embodied vigorous experiment­ation and respect for ancient tradition. In 1949 she was the first weaver to have a solo show at the Museum of Modern Art.

“Material Meaning: A Living Legacy of Anni Albers” at the Craft in America Center in L.A. pays homage to her spirit and methods.

The show features textile work by 10 contempora­ry artists (not incidental­ly, all women), each piece annotated with a few words about its relationsh­ip to something Albers practiced or taught. Personal statements by each artist further reflect on Albers as inspiratio­n and implicit mentor.

The show, guest curated by Cameron Taylor-Brown, is steeped in reverence and spiked with formal ingenuity.

What can be said of Albers’ work carries over to many of the pieces here, most of them what she called “pictorial weavings,” meant for no other use than visual delectatio­n. Sculptural qualities of texture and touch fuse with the attributes of design — pattern, rhythm, order and the deliberate, dynamic deviation from it.

In her “Weaving No. 12, the Leyland Collection” (2016), Rachel Snack whispers a small poem in charcoal grays, an elegant declamatio­n in rhyming shapes and subtle anomalies.

Brittany Wittman McLaughlin’s “Birch Bark” (2016) square is an acute tactile snapshot, an impression of one remarkable surface invoked via another.

In the exuberant “Paragon” (2017), Christy Matson stages a dance of diamonds across the woven plane, each shape slightly twisted and aflutter. The soft linen, cotton and wool strands keep company with a thicker, reed-like brown fiber, identified as paper, whose assertivel­y different texture and tempo enliven the surface even more.

The Tate Modern recently held a rare Albers retrospect­ive. “Material Meaning” is no less earnest and plenty enriching.

 ?? Madison Metro Craft in America ?? CHRISTY MATSON’S hand-woven “Paragon” (2017) is an exuberant dance of patterns and textures.
Madison Metro Craft in America CHRISTY MATSON’S hand-woven “Paragon” (2017) is an exuberant dance of patterns and textures.

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