Abell Auction Co. introduces an iconic large-scale stained-glass piece by renowned artist Yaacov Agam at its upcoming September Fine Art Auction

Agam window in the main lobby
The impressive 20-foot-long two-sided work is constructed with thousands of alternating rectangular and square glass pieces held together by a black lead armature with 16 panels that gives life to a striking three-dimensional structure composed of triangular prisms. The mosaic-like sections of this stained-glass artwork are tinted in a symphony of yellow, blue, white, orange, green, purple, pink, red, and blue vibrant hues which together generate ethereal beams of colored light that connect us to the mystical realm. Alongside the compelling abstract language of the polymorph window, the geometrical design of this sculptural composition creates a powerful visual illusion and appears to move and shift when viewed from different angles. These aspects further reveal the interactive vein of Agam’s practice and uncover his relentless quest for exploring human perception, in this case, by allowing us to discover framed squares next to other colors, shapes, and patterns. Contrary to other kinetic artworks by Agam, which can be moved or altered by the viewer, this massive glass piece is static. However, it still succeeds in being a constantly changing image through the strategic disposition of the colors and forms that bring forth the artist’s mastery of geometry and color theory.

YAACOV AGAM: SPRECKLES THEATRE STAINED GLASS WINDOW (EXTERIOR)
In terms of the influences behind the Spreckels’ window, its composition and bold colors speak to the legacy of early 20th-century European artists like Piet Mondrian who sought to uncover the basic structures of nature through his spiritually inspired geometric art. Next to this, the artist’s innovative handling of glass had some precedents mainly at the Bauhaus where artists like Josef Albers infused stained glass with a new minimalist aesthetic.(Claire Lui, The Little-Known Glass Works of Josef Albers, Guggenheim, 2017, [accessed 15/08/2022]). Next to this, it is important to add that in the 1950s, Agam studied under the Bauhaus; color-theoretician, Johannes Itten, who also led the short-lived Bauhaus glass painting workshop in the 1920s and most likely introduced Agam to this technique. At the same time, Agam also knew famed architect Frank Lloyd Wright and was influenced by his ideas which included the innovative use of decorated glass with geometric abstractions as part of his projects which the architect called “light screens.”(Frank Lloyd Wright’s Leaded Glass, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Trust, [accessed 15/08/2022]).All in all, during the 20th century the ancient art of stained glass was reinvented by avant garde artists. Agam joined in this journey and infused the millenary craft with his seemingly endless creativity.
Whilst nurtured by diverse modernist artistic currents, through the Spreckels’ window Agam transformed the traditionally plain stained-glass window into a multidimensional sculpture and exploited glass reflective qualities to create visual effects that also relate to his intention of combining formalist art with kabbalistic mysticism. As Art Curator Sayako Aragaki explains: “Agam in his work created a fusion between the realm of art and his own Jewish identity, which made his creations strikingly original and expressive of a higher spiritual truth.” (Sayako Aragaki, Agam-Beyond the Visible, Jerusalem, 2007, p. 18.) In this way, for the artist glass was one more means to lend visible the incommensurable mystery of the spiritual. Interestingly, over the years, the artist revisited this medium and created stained-glass windows for the historic Synagogue Loewenstrasse, in Zurich, and for the Jossy Berger Holocaust Study Center of Emunah Women of America, Community College, in Jerusalem, (1987). Particularly, the fourteen three-dimensional stained-glass windows he created for the Holocaust Study Center appear to be strongly influenced by what he achieved with the Spreckels’ window a few years before. (Sayako Aragaki, Agam-Beyond the Visible, Jerusalem, 2007, p. 114.)

YAACOV AGAM: SPRECKLES THEATRE STAINED GLASS WINDOW (INTERIOR)

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