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Current Exhibitions

Paintings of Dorothy Hood
March 18 - May 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Sir Winston Churchill: Making Art, Making History
February 20 - May 31, 2024
Virtual
Ansel Adams: Affirmation of Life
December 1, 2023 - June 30, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Picasso: Beyond the Canvas
October 4, 2023 - April 30, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
No Other Land: A Century of American Landscapes
September 21, 2023 - June 30, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Art of the American West: A Prominent Collection
August 24, 2023 - May 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Alexander Calder: Shaping a Primary Universe
August 23, 2023 - May 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Andy Warhol: All is Pretty
August 17, 2023 - May 31, 2024
Jackson Hole, WY
Georgia O’Keeffe and Ansel Adams: Modern Art, Modern Friendship
July 13, 2023 - July 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Florals for Spring, Groundbreaking
May 8, 2023 - May 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
First Circle: Circles in Art
February 14, 2023 - May 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Your Heart’s Blood: Intersections of Art and Literature
September 12, 2022 - June 30, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Meeting Life: N.C. Wyeth and the MetLife Murals
July 18, 2022 - June 30, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Andy Warhol Polaroids: Wicked Wonders
December 13, 2021 - June 30, 2024
Palm Desert, CA

Archived Exhibitions

2024

Discovering Creativity: American Art Masters
January 10 - March 17, 2024
Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens - West Palm Beach, FL

2023

Figurative Masters of the Americas
January 4 - February 12, 2023
Palm Desert, CA

2022

Abstract Expressionism: Transcending the Radical
January 12, 2022 - January 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
Georgia O’Keeffe and Marsden Hartley: Modern Minds
February 1, 2022 - February 28, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
My Own Skin: Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera
June 16 - December 31, 2022
Palm Desert, CA
N.C. Wyeth: A Decade of Painting
September 29, 2022 - March 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA

2021

It Was Acceptable in the 80s
April 27, 2021 - August 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
Elaine and Willem de Kooning: Painting in the Light
August 3, 2021 - January 31, 2022
Palm Desert, CA
James Rosenquist: Potent Pop
June 7, 2021 - January 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA

2019

Paul Jenkins: Coloring the Phenomenal
December 27, 2019 - March 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA

2018

N.C. Wyeth: Paintings and Illustrations
February 1 - May 31, 2018
Palm Desert, CA
The Paintings of Sir Winston Churchill
March 21 - May 30, 2018
Palm Desert, CA
The Paintings of Sir Winston Churchill
June 1 - July 27, 2018
San Francisco, CA
The Paintings of Sir Winston Churchill
August 1 - September 16, 2018
Jackson Hole, WY
de Kooning x de Kooning
November 8, 2018 - February 28, 2019
New York, NY
“Abstraction is real, probably more real than nature.” – Josef Albers

History

In the area of color experimentation and theory, Josef Albers’ experience at Black Mountain College provided the impetus to explore the properties of color that went beyond his Bauhaus experience. What evolved was a systematic approach to exploring “tonal possibilities of colors, their relativity, their interaction, and influence on each other, cold and warmth, light intensity, color intensity, psychical and spatial effects” (Josef Albers, “Concerning Art Instruction,” Black Mountain College Bulletin, no. 2, June 1934). That quest would provide the basis for one of the most iconic series of artworks of the twentieth century; a series of more than two thousand works using a fixed set of templates whose precise optical effects would not demonstrate nor provoke a uniform reaction, but rather set the viewer up to acknowledge differences and relative shifts in color perception. 

Albers would embrace four basic nested square patterns — each arranged on the same vertical axis, but not on the same horizontal axis. The effect is one of strobe-like insistence with the weight of the nested squares sinking toward the lower edge of the picture plane. That implied gravitational effect is one of slight instability that ironically depends upon the most stable geometric form of all — the square.  

During the mid-1950s, Albers introduced a mitered Homage version, the outer squares of which provide a beveled confluence that intensifies perspective, narrows our gaze, and operates as a threshold as well as a portal. A succinct gateway for us to step through before fully immersing ourselves in Albers’ play on color, relativity, and perception, it also lends a sensation of stage and performance as if its framing were a proscenium – the metaphorical plane of space in a theatre surrounded on the top and sides and on the bottom by the stage floor itself.

Mitered Homage paintings are uncommon, but those of a two-color center rather than a solitary swatch are a rare bird indeed. For certain, the effect of a two-color scheme within the recessional effect from the four corners to their heavily implied vanishing point at the center is an intensified play on psychical and spatial perception. Homage to the Square “In and Out”, 1959 is a particularly effective example. Its emerald-green center square set within a teal green surround provides a highly satisfying interaction of like-hued color and light intensity. It is a performance by Albers, who, like Mondrian, worked not at an easel, but upon a table and using a palette knife spread paint as he was fond of saying, ‘like butter on pumpernickel.’ Albers, as rigorous as pathologically consistent insisted upon using Masonite on panels from eleven inches up to its largest width at forty-eight inches. At forty-by-forty inches, In and Out, 1959 in quality, rarity, and size certainly ranks among those works Albers deemed destined for museums and his best collectors.  

“In visual perception a color is almost never seen as it really is – as it physically is. This fact makes color the most relative medium in art.” – Josef Albers

MARKET INSIGHTS

  • Albers_AMR
  • The record for an Albers painting at auction was set in 2017 when Homage to the Square: Temperate sold for $3,004,792 USD.
  • The graph prepared by Art Market Research shows that since 1976, paintings by Albers have increased at a 5.9% annual rate of return. 
  • Homage to the Square: “In and Out” comes from Albers’ most sought-after series, the Homage to the Square, an exploration of abstraction, nested squares, and chromatic interactions that began in 1949.

Top Results at Auction

Oil on masonite, 32 x 32 in. Sold at Sotheby’s London: October 2017.

“Homage to the Square: Temperate” (1957) sold for $3,004,792 USD.

Oil on masonite, 32 x 32 in. Sold at Sotheby’s London: October 2017.
Oil on masonite, 48 x 48 in. Sold at Christie’s New York: November 2012.

“Homage to the Square: White Nimbus” (1964) sold for $2,210,500 USD.

Oil on masonite, 48 x 48 in. Sold at Christie’s New York: November 2012.
Oil on masonite, 40 x 40 in. Sold at Sotheby’s New York: May 2018.

“Homage to the Square: Light Inside” (1967) sold for $2,055,000 USD.

Oil on masonite, 40 x 40 in. Sold at Sotheby’s New York: May 2018.
Oil on masonite, 30 x 30 in. Sold at Christie’s London: October 2019.

“Study for Homage to the Square: Red Tetrachord” (1962) sold for $1,997,122 USD.

Oil on masonite, 30 x 30 in. Sold at Christie’s London: October 2019.

Comparable Paintings Sold at Auction

Oil on masonite, 40 x 40 in. Sold at Sotheby’s New York: May 2018.

“Homage to the Square: Light Inside” (1967) sold for $2,055,000 USD.

Oil on masonite, 40 x 40 in. Sold at Sotheby’s New York: May 2018.
  • Painted 8 years after Homage to the Square: “In and Out”
  • Similar gray and green palette as Homage to the Square: “In and Out”
  • Same 40 in. x 40 in. dimensions as Homage to the Square: “In and Out”
Oil on masonite, 40 x 40 in. Sold at Christie's New York: November 2016.

“Homage to the Square” (1973) sold for $1,927,500 USD.

Oil on masonite, 40 x 40 in. Sold at Christie’s New York: November 2016.
  • Painted 14 years after Homage to the Square: “In and Out”
  • Same 40 in. x 40 in. dimensions as Homage to the Square: “In and Out”
Oil on masonite, 40 x 40 in. Sold at Christie's Paris: December 2016.

“Homage to the Square: Midsummer” (1964) sold for $1,422,501 USD.

Oil on masonite, 40 x 40 in. Sold at Christie’s Paris: December 2016.
  • Painted 5 years after Homage to the Square: “In and Out”
  • Same 40 in. x 40 in. dimensions as Homage to the Square: “In and Out”

Similar Paintings in Museum Collections

Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York

“Homage to the Square: Apparition” (1959), oil on masonite, 47 1/2 x 47 1/2 in.

Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.

“Homage to the Square – Insert” (1959), oil on masonite, 48 x 48 in.

Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

“Homage to the Square: ‘Gained'” (1959), oil on composition board, 40 x 40 in.

Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, Texas

“Homage to the Square: Straight” (1962), oil on board, 40 x 40 in.
“Every perception of color is an illusion, we do not see colors as they really are. In our perception they alter one another.” – Josef Albers

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