Rauschenberg, Rest in Peace
Posted on May 13, 2008
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Pop artist Robert Rauschenberg dies in Fla. at 82
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Robert Rauschenberg, whose use of odd and everyday articles earned him a reputation as a pioneer in pop art but whose talents spanned the worlds of painting, sculpture and dance, has died, his gallery representative said Tuesday. He was 82.
Rauschenberg died Monday, said Jennifer Joy, his representative at PaceWildenstein gallery in New York.
Rauschenberg, who first gained fame in the 1950s, didn’t mine popular culture wholesale as Andy Warhol did with Campbell’s soup cans and Roy Lichtenstein did with comic books.
Instead, his “combines,” incongruous combinations of three-dimensional objects and paint, shared pop’s blurring of art and objects from modern life.
He also responded to his pop colleagues and began incorporating up-to-the-minute photographed images in his works in the 1960s, including, memorably, pictures of John F. Kennedy.
Among Rauschenberg’s most famous works was “Bed,” created after he woke up in the mood to paint but had no money for a canvas. His solution was to take the quilt off his bed and use paint, toothpaste and fingernail polish.
Not to be limited by paint, Rauschenberg was a sculptor and choreographer and even won a 1984 Grammy Award for best album package for the Talking Heads album “Speaking in Tongues.”
“I’m curious,” he said in 1997 in one of the few interviews he granted in later years. “It’s very rewarding. I’m still discovering things every day.”
Rauschenberg’s more than 50 years in art produced a varied and prolific collection that that filled both Manhattan locations of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum during a 1998 retrospective.
Time magazine art critic Robert Hughes, in his book “American Visions,” called Rauschenberg “a protean genius who showed America that all of life could be open to art. … Rauschenberg didn’t give a fig for consistency, or curating his reputation; his taste was always facile, omnivorous, and hit-or-miss, yet he had a bigness of soul and a richness of temperament that recalled Walt Whitman.”
Rauschenberg split his time between New York and Captiva Island in Florida, where he kept a house stocked with his own art and those of his friends.
“I like things that are almost souvenirs of a creation, as opposed to being an artwork,” he said in a 1997 Harper’s Bazaar interview, “because the process is more interesting than completing the stuff.”
He studied painting at the Kansas City Art Institute in 1947. He later took his studies to Black Mountain College in North Carolina, where he studied under master Josef Albers, and alongside contemporary artists such as choreographer Merce Cunningham and musician John Cage. He also studied at the Art Students League in New York City.
Rauschenberg first paintings in the early 1950s comprised a series of all-white and all-black surfaces under laid with wrinkled newspaper. In later works he began making art from what others would consider junk — old soda bottles, traffic barricades, and stuffed birds and calling them “combine” paintings.
One of Rauschenberg’s first and most famous combines was entitled “Monogram,” a 1959 work consisting of a stuffed angora goat, a tire, a police barrier, the heel of a shoe, a tennis ball, and paint.
By the mid-1950s, he was also designing sets and costumes for dance companies and window displays for Tiffany and Bonwit Teller.
He met Jasper Johns in 1954. He and the younger artist, both destined to become world famous, became lovers and influenced each other’s work. According to the book “Lives of the Great 20th Century Artists,” Rauschenberg told biographer Calvin Tomkins that “Jasper and I literally traded ideas. He would say, `I’ve got a terrific idea for you,’ and then I’d have to find one for him.”
Born Milton Rauschenberg in 1925 in Port Arthur, Texas, and raised a Christian fundamentalist, Rauschenberg wanted to be a minister but gave it up because his church banned dancing.
“I was considered slow,” he once said “While my classmates were reading their textbooks, I drew in the margins.”
He was drafted into the U.S. Navy during World War II and knew little about art until a chance visit to an art museum where he saw his first painting at age 18. He drew portraits of his fellow sailors for them to send home.
When his time in the service was up, Rauschenberg used the GI bill to pay his tuition at art school. He changed his name to Robert because it sounded more artistic.
In recent years he founded the organization Change Inc., which helps struggling artists pay medical bills.
“I don’t ever want to go,” he told Harper’s when asked about dying. “I don’t have a sense of great reality about the next world; my feet are too ugly to wear those golden slippers. But I’m working on my fear of it. And my fear is that something interesting will happen, and I’ll miss it.”
Stoked Sessions
Posted on April 15, 2008
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Hello all… I was fortunate enough to get a board in this show in L.A.
There are ton of killer artists including: Abe Lincoln JR., Chris Patsras, Hosoi, Kofie One and many more.
Help out at risk youth buy bidding some some art!
So check out the show and happy bidding.The Grind Art & Print Gallery
12222 Venice Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA 90066
Tickets are: $10
Check out StokedSessions.com
FLASHBACKS
Posted on April 1, 2008
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I have recently been going through my piles of backup discs.
I thought I would share some of the past artwork and design that I have done.
Take a look in the right hand column and give a look see.. hopefully there’s something you like.
thanks
THANKS for coming out
Posted on March 16, 2008
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Thanks to everyone who came out the the show @ LAB last night.
It was a good turn out.. great to see some new and old faces.
Extra thanks to Dana, Stephen and Josh Faulk for installing the show while I was down in Miami talking shoes!
Kim and Todd for having us… thanks…
Sorry we had to bail so early.. the little man needed to get his sleep on!
If you missed the opening stop by and check out the show its up until April! thanks
www.lab-boston.com
SATURDAY MARCH 15th @ LAB in BOSTON
Posted on March 12, 2008
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I would like to remind everyone about our opening in BOSTON this coming Saturday night.SATURDAY MARCH 15TH @ LAB IN BOSTONFeatured Artists:Damion SilverDana WoulfeStephen HoldingOn the wheels of steel:DJ BoxxcuttaOPENING RECEPTION:7:00 - 9:30 PM LAB 113 BRIGHTON AVE ALLSTON, MA www.lab-boston.com
Visually Remastered @ DDR PROJECTS MARCH 8th
Posted on March 6, 2008
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Stop ByDDR Projects this SaturdayVisually RemasteredA group show of newly refurbished paintings of yesteryear! Artist:Abe Lincoln JR., BEZERC, CHRIS BETTING, ETHOS, JK5, PEAT WOLLAEGER, NICK Z., DAMION SILVER, KELLY WILLIAMS AND MANY MANY MOREOPENING RECEPTIONSaturday 7-10 pmDDR PROJECTS1532 East BroadwayLong BEach, CAWWW.DDRPROJECTS.COM ![]()


