Josef Albers, Alexander Archipenko, Carl Buchheister, Serge Charchoune, Sonia Delaunay, Farfa, Jean Fautrier, Natalia Goncharova, Raoul Hausmann, Marcel Janco, Joseph Lacasse, Mikhail Larionov, Stanton Macdonald-Wright, Alberto Magnelli, Emilio Pettoruti, Alfred Reth, Hans Richter, Victor Servranckx, Gino Severini, Georges Vantongerloo, Various Artists
Futurists, Abstractionists, Dadaists: the Forerunners of the Avant-Garde, vol. I
1961–62, published 1962
Illustrated book with nineteen etchings (three with drypoint, two with aquatint, and one with aquatint and embossing) and one engraving
Not on view
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Josef Albers
American, born Germany. 1888–1976 242 works onlineJosef Albers always went back to basics. As a child, he gained skills in carpentry and commercial painting by helping his father with work.
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Natalia Goncharova
Russian, 1881–1962 210 works onlineThese are the words with which Natalia Goncharova expressed her skepticism toward the prestige that Western art enjoyed in Russia.
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Sonia Delaunay
French, born Ukraine. 1885–1979 52 works onlineRed and green, blue and orange, yellow and violet: these color combinations were vital to the artistic practice and theory of Sonia Delaunay, whose vast body of work—paintings and drawings, prints and illustrations, textiles and furnishings, clothing and accessories—enthralled its earliest viewers, users, and wearers.
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Alexander Archipenko
American, born Ukraine. 1887–1964 36 works onlineThat exhibition, and the group of artists in it, would become associated with Cubism , a new way of looking through many views simultaneously and representing figures through simplified geometric planes.
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