“A craft gives somebody who is trying
to find his way a kind of discipline.”
Selected Works
Bio
Anni Albers (1899–1994) was a pioneering textile artist, designer, and educator who played a leading role in twentieth-century modernism. She combined the ancient craft of hand-weaving with the visual language of modern art, creating innovative woven works, graphic wall hangings, and later printmaking.
Discouraged from joining painting classes because she was a woman, Anni was introduced to hand-weaving at the Bauhaus, a radical art school in Germany. There, she began exploring weaving as a modernist medium, using textiles as a form of artistic expression, drawing inspiration from Pre-Columbian art and advanced weaving techniques. Her landmark book On Weaving (1965) helped establish design studies as an academic discipline.
Anni Albers’s work has been featured in major international exhibitions and is held in leading public and private collections, cementing her legacy as one of the most influential textile artists of the twentieth century.