Contemporary Art
Essay by 24 • March 30, 2011 • 575 Words (3 Pages) • 1,223 Views
Eve
ARH Contemporary Art
Robert Rauschenberg
The article, Rauschenberg's Development", talks about the journey and risk Rauschenberg's takes in developing his own style. Breaking away from the constraints of art world at the time he was able to express himself in a bold, exciting and at times controversial way. He was fascinated with social as well as political life i.e. Newspapers and incorporated these elements as well as those of his own life and many found objects to create a tapestry of life as he saw it.
In the late 1950s he came under the influence of Marcel Duchamp, and with his friend Jasper Johns, Rauschenberg became a pivotal figure in the emerging pop art movement. His enormously inventive paintings, some of which incorporate silkscreen, include everyday images and objects and are executed in a loose, spontaneous style. He has also experimented a lot with assemblage the famous Monogram which incorporates a whole stuffed angora goat encircled by an automobile tire, is characteristic of his three-dimensional collages known as "combines," which he created between 1954 to 1964. Some of the works that were characterized by Rauschenberg's combine theory that are mentioned in the article are Ace, Charlene, and the Black and White paintings, as well as others. Rauschenberg incorporated many elements other than canvas and paint into these pieces. Elements of collage were incorporated, as well as found objects. He called this process "assemblage". Rauschenberg "broke down barriers between painting and sculpture by incorporating everyday objects such as Coca-Cola bottles, clothing, newspaper clippings, taxidermied animals, and photographs. In addition to breaking down barriers between painting and sculpture, he was also breaking down barriers between the art world and the outside world. By including everyday objects he was making references to popular culture. This pop culture referencing would later explode
...
...