| |
Robert Rauschenberg
Robert Rauschenberg is a painter, sculptor, and graphic artist
known for helping to redefine American art in the 1950s and '60s,
providing an alternative to the then-dominant aesthetic of Abstract
Expressionism. Rauschenbert realized his talent with drawing when
he turned 22 in the Marines.
Born Milton Ernest Rauschenberg on October 22, 1925 in Port Arthur,
Texas, Rauschenberg studied at the Kansas City Art Institute and
the Académie Julian in Paris, before enrolling in 1948 at
the legendary Black Mountain College in North Carolina. There his
painting instructor was the renowned Bauhaus figure Josef Albers,
whose rigid discipline and sense of method inspired Rauschenberg,
as he once said, to do "exactly the reverse" of what Albers
taught him.
More often, Rauschenberg's early works reflected the aesthetic
of his friend, composer John Cage, another member of the Black Mountain
faculty, whose music of chance occurrences and found sounds perfectly
suited Rauschenberg's personality. The "white paintings' produced
by Rauschenberg at Black Mountain in 1951, while they contain no
image at all, are said to be so exceptionally blank and reflective
that their surfaces respond and change in sympathy with the ambient
conditions in which they are shown, "so you could almost tell
how many people are in the room," as Rauschenberg once commented.
The White Paintings are said to have directly influenced Cage in
the composition of his completely "silent" piece titled
4'33" the following year.
In 1952 Rauschenberg began his series of "Black Paintings"
and "Red Paintings," in which large, expressionistically
brushed areas of color were combined with collage and found objects
attached to the canvas. These so-called "Combine Paintings"
ultimately came to include such theretofore un-painterly objects
as a stuffed goat and the artist's own bed, breaking down traditional
boundaries between painting and sculpture, and reportedly prompting
one Abstract Expressionist painter to remark, "If this is Modern
Art, then I quit!" Rauschenberg's Combines provided inspiration
for a generation of artists seeking alternatives to traditional
artistic media. (See Assemblage, Arte Povera.)
Rauschenberg's approach was sometimes called "Neo-Dada,"
a label he shared with the painter Jasper Johns, with whom he had
a long artistic and personal relationship. Rauschenberg's oft-repeated
quote that he wanted to work "in the gap between art and life,"
suggested a questioning of the distinction between art objects and
everyday objects reminiscent of the issues raised by the notorious
"Fountain" of Dada pioneer Marcel Duchamp. At the same
time, Johns' paintings of numerals, flags, and the like, were reprising
Duchamp's message of the role of the observer in creating art's
meaning.
By 1962, Rauschenberg's paintings were beginning to incorporate
not only found objects but found images as well--photographs transferred
to the canvas by means of the silkscreen process. Previously used
only in commercial applications, silkscreen allowed Rauschenberg
to address the multiple reproducibility of images, and the consequent
flattening of experience that that implies. In this respect, his
work is exactly contemporaneous with that of Andy Warhol, and both
Rauschenberg and Johns are frequently cited as important forerunners
of American Pop Art.
In addition to painting and sculpture, Rauschenberg's long career
has also included significant contributions to printmaking and Performance
Art. As of 2003 he continues to work from his home and studio in
Captiva, Florida.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| | | | | | | | | | | | |
|
|
|