Robert rauschenberg updated

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Robert Rauschenberg neo-dada

Born: Texas, 1925Died: Florida, 2008

Rauschenberg's influences: Society and Art

American art of that era

Post-war affluence

Rauschenberg's influences: Artists

New York painters

The Dadaists

Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968)

Duchamp: Bicycle Wheel (1913)

Rauschenberg's influences: Cornell

Joseph Cornell (1903-1972)

Cassiopeia 1 (1960)

Rauschenberg's influences: Schwitters

Kurt Schwitters (1887-1948)

Something or other (1922)

Rauschenberg: Neo Dada Movement

Neo Dada

The bridge into Pop Art

Jasper Johns

Jasper Johns

The Critic Smiles (1969)

Numbers in color (1958-59)

Johns: Three flags (1968)

Jasper Johns once said “No American artist, invented more than Rauschenberg”

All white and Black Paintings

Works similar to Rauschenberg

Lucio Fontana (1899-1968)

Pananti (1960)

•Fontana can be considered one of the most important artists in the history of Italian art.

Works similar to Rauschenberg

Yves Klein (1928-1962)

Angel Blue (1961)

Robert Rauschenberg on "Erased de Kooning"

This piece was one of Rauschenberg's most controversial.

It raised many fundamental questions about the nature of art.

The viewer was challenged to consider whether erasing another artist's work could be a creative act, as well as whether the work was only "art" because Rauschenberg was responsible.

Rauschenberg's work: Combines

This is when non-traditional materials and objects are employed in innovative combinations.

Monogram (1955-59)

Rauschenberg: Bed (1955)

Rauschenberg: First landing jump (1961)

Rauschenberg's work: Silk screens

Retroactive 1 (1964) Creek (1964)

Rauschenberg's Legacy

Rauschenberg died of heart failure in 2008, aged 82. How should he be remembered?

Obscuring boundaries Obscuring boundaries

Pushing art Inspiration

Marilyn Monroe (1967)Coca-cola bottles (1962)

Warhol:

Roy Lichtenstein, who's use of comic strips in art followed Rauschenberg's by 10 years, acknowledged the latter's influence on him, and on pop art in general.

“The coke bottles he put into his art, the happenings and environments, all the things in which he was involved, brought up a raw, strictly American material .. merchandise as merchandise. Art became American rather than European. The Sixties, Seventies and Eighties were all influenced by that work”.

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