福利视频

Art in Context

Here, individual artworks by Rauschenberg are examined within the scope of the artist鈥檚 work and life and within a broader art-historical and historical context. Works are also considered in relation to archival material often residing within the foundation鈥檚 holdings.

  • Stoned Moon Drawing, 1969

    Stoned Moon

    Stoned Moon Drawing, dated October 28, 1969, records Rauschenberg鈥檚 reflections on the Apollo 11 launch in July of that same year and the lithographic series it inspired. Embedded with the artist鈥檚 writings are photographs by Sidney Felsen and Malcolm Lubliner, who documented the working process at the innovative print studio Gemini G.E.L., Los Angeles, along with official images from NASA. The right side of the composition features the rising smoke plume of the rocket launch and the first boot prints on the moon鈥檚 surface. This work, together with the thirty-four lithographs and the nineteen drawings and collages for the unpublished , provides a singular account of the space program and humankind鈥檚 first lunar landing. In the collaged text, he remarks on the environs of Cape Canaveral, Florida, 鈥渉ighways built yesterday past ghost towns of technology abandoned with the haste and impatience of emergency surgery.鈥 He intimates the anthropomorphizing sentiment, 鈥淢y head said for the first time moon was going to have company and knew it.鈥 Rauschenberg鈥檚 impressions contain a mixture of trepidation and wonder that conveys the technological and astronomical sublime.

  • Robert Rauschenberg, "Earth Day," 1970

    , 1970

    Earth Day

    In response to a massive oil spill off the coast of Southern California in 1969, Wisconsin Senator Gaylord Nelson initiated the idea of the first annual Earth Day on April 22, 1970. Soliciting support from Democratic and Republican leaders, Earth Day was conceived as a 鈥渘ational teach-in鈥 to bring public awareness to the threat of global air and water pollution. What began as a grass-roots movement, with twenty million Americans participating, is now recognized as the launch of the environmental movement and observed in nearly 200 countries around the world.聽

    Robert Rauschenberg designed the first Earth Day poster to benefit the American Environment Foundation in Washington, D.C.,聽and it was published in an edition of 10,300 by Castelli Graphics, New York.聽 Using the bald eagle as the dominant image, the artist symbolically placed the United States at the center of a global problem. Muted and muddy tones depicting environmental decay surround the national bird: polluted cities, contaminated waters, junkyards littered with debris, landscapes scarred by highways and deforestation, and the gorilla, another endangered animal. The safekeeping of the environment and the notion of individual responsibility for the welfare of life on earth was a longstanding concern of Rauschenberg, and this notion would inform his art and activism throughout his life. The poster designed for the inaugural Earth Day was one of many he would create to raise funds for the myriad social causes that were important to him.聽

    A larger format lithograph, based on the original poster design and created as an edition of 50, was published by the American Environment Foundation and produced by Gemini G.E.L., Los Angeles.

  • Caryatid Cavalcade I / ROCI CHILE, 1985

    Rauschenberg Overseas Culture Interchange (ROCI)

    Rauschenberg鈥檚 belief in the power of art as a catalyst for positive social change was at the heart of his participation in numerous international projects in the 1970s and early 1980s, and which culminated between 1984 and 1991 with his Rauschenberg Overseas Culture Interchange (ROCI). ROCI (pronounced 鈥淩ocky,鈥 the name of the artist鈥檚 pet turtle) was a tangible expression of Rauschenberg鈥檚 long-term commitment to human rights and to the freedom of artistic expression. Funded almost entirely by the artist, Rauschenberg traveled to countries around the world often where artistic experimentation had been suppressed, with the purpose of sparking a dialogue and achieving a mutual understanding through the creative process.聽Between 1985 and 1990, the project was realized in ten countries in the following order: Mexico, Chile, Venezuela, China, Tibet, Japan, Cuba, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR),聽Germany, and聽Malaysia聽with a final exhibition held in 1991 at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

  • Retroactive I, 1963

    Retroactive I

    Retroactive I (1963) belongs to the series of silkscreen paintings that Rauschenberg made between 1962 and 1964. His subject matter and commercial means of reproduction for these works聽led critics to聽identify聽him with Pop art. Unlike the one-to-one ratio he could achieve in the transfer drawings, the mechanically produced screens allowed him to transcribe his own photographs and images taken from the popular press onto a larger scale.聽

  • monogram

    Monogram, 1955鈥59

    惭辞苍辞驳谤补尘听

    Monogram (1955鈥59) belongs to the series of Combines that Rauschenberg made between 1954 and 1964. A term coined by Rauschenberg, Combines merged aspects of painting and sculpture to become an entirely new artistic category. Art critic Leo Steinberg observed that the orientation of the Combines challenged the traditional concept of 聽the picture plane as an extension of the viewers space, providing a window into another reality. Instead, Steinberg argued, a Combine is like a tabletop or bulletin board鈥攁 鈥渞eceptor surface on which objects are scattered, on which data is entered.鈥 Rauschenberg had seen the stuffed Angora goat鈥攖he focus of Monogram鈥攊n the window of a secondhand office-furniture store on Seventh Avenue in New York. Paying fifteen dollars toward the asking price of thirty-five dollars, Rauschenberg brought the goat to his studio, and before its completion in 1959, Monogram evolved through three states documented in drawings and photographs. The title is derived from the union of the goat and tire, which reminded Rauschenberg of the interweaving letters in a monogram.聽

  • Autobiography, 1968

    Autobiography

    Rauschenberg鈥檚 monumental print Autobiography (1968) is a summation work that brings together the life and work of the then forty-three-year-old artist. Printed on three sheets of paper in an edition of 2,000, under the sponsorship of Marion Javits, wife of the U.S. Senator Jacob Javits, Autobiography is the first fine art print made on a billboard press. In each section, the artist鈥檚 personal history is woven together through a montage of indexical images鈥攄irect traces of the artist鈥攕uch as photographs and X-rays, combined with references to places of personal importance and 鈥渇ound鈥 imagery, including an umbrella and wheel, which are among Rauschenberg鈥檚 recurrent motifs. Upon its completion in January 1968, the sixteen-and-a-half-foot-tall, color, offset lithograph was immediately exhibited at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.聽

  • Mirage (Jammer), 1975

    Mirage (Jammer)聽

    Rauschenberg began the Jammer series in fall 1975, following a trip he had made the previous spring to Ahmadabad, India, a center of textile production. Bringing fabrics back to his studio in Captiva, Florida, the artist remarked on the beauty and luxury of the textiles and the sumptuousness of the colors, which appeared in marked contrast to the hardships he had observed in India: 鈥渢he cruel combination of disease and starvation and poverty and mud and sand and yet it was all punctuated with maybe just that one piece of beautiful silk.鈥 Mirage (1975), characteristic of the series, is made from sewn fabric; brightly colored and translucent silk, devoid of imagery that is loosely tacked to the wall, allowing gravity to determine its precise disposition. The name of the series is derived from 鈥渨indjammer,鈥 a type of sailboat, and the name 鈥渕irage鈥 has a watery association. Mirage, referring to an optical illusion often perceived at sea, captures the fleeting sensibility of the piece.