Eclat (Furnishing Fabric)

Description

Anni Albers was one of the leading textile designers and weavers of the 20th century. She trained at the Bauhaus school of design in Germany, where she met her husband, Josef Albers. The Bauhaus closed permanently in 1933 under pressure from the Nazis, and the couple relocated to the United States. Throughout these years, Anni Albers continued to design and weave, and in the 1960s she developed a new interest in printmaking. Eclat, a seemingly random arrangement of small parallelograms arranged on the diagonal, was first conceived as a print and was subsequently produced by Knoll as a furnishing fabric.

Provenance

Knoll International [this and the following according to email from G. Larson to E. Warren, Aug. 8, 2019; copy in curatorial object file]; sold to George Larson (born 1935), Chicago, 1978; given to the Art Institute of Chicago, 2014.

Eclat (Furnishing Fabric)

Anni Albers

1974 (produced 1976)

Accession Number

225809

Medium

Cotton, linen and rayon; plain weave with paired warps; screenprinted

Dimensions

282.3 × 143.8 cm (111 1/8 × 56 5/8 in.); Repeat: 12.7 × 45.8 cm (5 × 18 in.)

Classification

weaving - printed

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of George Larson in honor of Christa C. Mayer Thurman