Robert Rauschenberg, a brief history
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Robert Rauschenberg. Born Port Arthur, Texas, 22nd October
1925.
Robert Rauschenberg began to studying pharmacology at the
University of Texas at Austin before being drafted into the United
States navy, where he served as a neuropsychiatric technician in
the navy hospital corps in San Diego. In 1947, he enrolled at the
Kansas City Art Institute and travelled to Paris to study at the
Académie Julian the following year.
In the fall of 1948, he returned to the United States to study
under Josef Albers at Black Mountain College, near Asheville, North
Carolina, which he continued to attend intermittently through 1952.
While taking classes at the Art Students League, New York, from
1949 to 1951, Rauschenberg was offered his first solo exhibition at
the Betty Parsons Gallery. Some of the works from this period
included blueprints, monochromatic white paintings, and black
paintings. From the fall of 1952 to the spring of 1953, he
travelled to Europe and North Africa with Cy Twombly, whom he had
met at the Art Students League. During his travels, Rauschenberg
worked on a series of small collages, hanging assemblages, and
small boxes filled with found elements, which he exhibited in Rome
and Florence.
Upon his return to New York in 1953, Rauschenberg completed his
series of black paintings, using newspaper as the ground, and began
work on sculptures created from wood, stones, and other materials
found on the streets; paintings made with tissue paper, dirt, or
gold leaf; and more conceptually oriented works such as Automobile
Tire Print (1953) and Erased de Kooning Drawing (1953). By the end
of 1953, he had begun his Red Painting series on canvases that
incorporated newspapers, fabric, and found objects and evolved in
1954 into the Combines, a term Rauschenberg coined for his
well-known works that integrated aspects of painting and sculpture
and would often include such objects as a stuffed eagle or goat,
street signs, or a quilt and pillow. In late 1953, he met Jasper
Johns, with whom he is considered the most influential of artists
who reacted against Abstract Expressionism. The two artists had
neighbouring studios, regularly exchanging ideas and discussing
their work, until 1961.
Rauschenberg began to silkscreen paintings in 1962. He had his
first career retrospective, organized by the Jewish Museum, New
York, in 1963 and was awarded the Grand Prize for Painting at the
1964 Venice Biennale. He spent much of the remainder of the 1960s
dedicated to more collaborative projects including printmaking,
Performance, choreography, set design, and art-and-technology
works. In 1966, he co-founded Experiments in Art and Technology, an
organization that sought to promote collaborations between artists
and engineers.
In 1970, Rauschenberg established a permanent residence and studio
in Captiva, Florida, where he still lives. A retrospective
organized by the National Collection of Fine Arts, Washington,
D.C., travelled throughout the United States in 1976–78.
Rauschenberg continued to travel widely, embarking on a number of
collaborations with artisans and workshops abroad, which culminated
in the Rauschenberg Overseas Culture Interchange (ROCI) project
from 1985 to 1991. In 1997, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New
York, exhibited the largest retrospective of Rauschenberg’s work to
date, which travelled to Houston and to Europe in 1998.
Extract from Guggenheim museum website
(http://www.guggenheimcollection.org)
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