福利视频

Larry B. Wright and Rauschenberg in Rauschenberg鈥檚 Laika Lane studio with Half A Grandstand (Spread) (1978), Captiva, Florida, 1978

Rauschenberg and Larry B. Wright, ca. 1980.
Photo: courtesy Larry B. Wright

Larry B. Wright, Rauschenberg, and unidentified man working on costumes for Trisha Brown鈥檚 Set and Reset (1983), Larry B. Wright Art Productions, New York, 1983. Photo: Terry Van Brunt

Burt Barr, Rauschenberg, Trisha Brown, and Larry B. Wright working on costumes for Brown鈥檚 Set and Reset (1983), Larry B. Wright Art Productions, New York, 1983. Photo: Terry Van Brunt

Larry B. Wright in front of Rauschenberg鈥檚 poster for
Talking Heads鈥 Speaking in Tongues(1983), ca. 1983

Larry Wright


Larry Wright is a master printer and former professor at the School of Visual Arts, New York. He is the principal of Larry B. Wright Art Productions, New York, a fine art printing and fabrication studio, which has worked with well-known artists and gallerists such as Leo Castelli, Larry Poons, Rauschenberg, Art Spiegelman, and Andy Warhol. In addition to a selection of Rauschenberg鈥檚 print projects, the studio also facilitated collaborations between Rauschenberg and choreographer Trisha Brown. In the late 1970s Wright worked in Rauschenberg鈥檚 studio in Captiva, Florida, helping to set up the artist鈥檚 photography and screen-printing workspace.

Excerpt from Interview with Larry Wright by听Sara Sinclair and Christine Frohnert, 2015


In looking at the works from the 1978听Works from Captiva听catalogue for the show at the Vancouver Art Museum, some of the works that we didn鈥檛 have out here today are in the catalogue, one of them being听Half A Grandstand, which is aptly named because it is very big. It鈥檚 six door skins, horizontally arranged鈥攖hree on the top, three along the bottom on their sides鈥攕o it鈥檚 about 21 feet long, something like that probably, by about 6 or 7 feet high.听Half A Grandstand听was the product of quite a night. Bob used to joke鈥攖here was a lot of drinking going on as we were working, but it was just part of the background, part of the wallpaper. But there were occasionally nights that stood out, in which case we鈥檇 meet up at the Beach House in the morning and Bob would say something like, 鈥淚t was very drunk out last night.鈥 This was one of those nights.听Half A Grandstand听was truly a party. We were printing and we were painting and we were gluing and we were making stuff and Bob was just鈥攈e took everything off of my worktable. He put my ruler in it, he took my towel, my rag. I would work with something and he鈥檇 just take it and boom, it was in the artwork. It was kind of a snapshot of the free-for-all that the work environment was or at best could be.

He was just brilliant and when the mood鈥攚hen the spirit was upon him as they say, there was just no stopping him. It was contagious and everybody鈥攎yself and anybody else in the room鈥攚ould get caught up in it. The听Half A Grandstand听piece, it does have lots of stuff in it that wasn鈥檛 intended. With that piece, there was very little planning. We knew we were going to make something real big and real horizontal. [Laughs] But it really sort of just birthed in front of us.

As I said before Bob was really鈥攈e was fast. It was amazing to watch him work. He had this intrinsic talent that was so much a part of him. You鈥檇 be speaking with him and he鈥檇 be telling you something and he鈥檇 put three or four things on the table and you鈥檇 look at him and just say, 鈥淪hit, that鈥檚 beautiful. The arrangement of what you just did with the saltshaker and that cup. And look at the napkin.鈥 He just would do things鈥攈e would elevate any three-dimensional situation into art. To watch him work was truly electrifying because he made connections between things, among things, that all just seemed perfect. You put two things next to one another that are unrelated, but Bob would see the connectivity. It鈥檚 like some savant pool player who, you see the pool table and the cues, he sees dotted lines that go to the corner pockets. Bob was like that. He would see something the rest of us didn鈥檛 see.

You鈥檇 be walking down the street with him and you鈥檙e all looking at the same stuff, you鈥檙e in Manhattan. But Bob would see something. He鈥檇 just sort of go over and take a picture of some little detail鈥攁 standpipe in front of a building鈥攁nd it was beautiful or suddenly it became like an animal or suddenly it became a person鈥檚 figure of some kind. The thing about photography with him was that you were a little bit able to know what it was like to be inside of his head. You鈥檇 see the results of it, but especially with the photographs, the things that interested him鈥攖he sort of imperfection and stuff that he was attracted to, which really make things interesting鈥攚ould call to him in a way that other people couldn鈥檛 hear. [Laughs]

So, the听Half A Grandstand鈥擨鈥檓 going to look down because I have the catalogue here. Yes, we鈥檝e got our dishtowel. We鈥檝e got my two napkins because we ate something. He鈥檚 got an image鈥攁n anatomical image鈥攊n our beer flats, we had anatomical images of body parts and stuff鈥攕o he has a kind of medical drawing of a leg and then he has all of these鈥攆rom the plants and fruits box鈥攈e has grapes. Actually the leg is supposed to be Italy and they鈥檙e stomping on grapes, which is wine. So that all relates. That鈥檚 a whole little highlighted panel that sits very bright in the middle of a yellow rectangle on the far left side of听Half A Grandstand听and it鈥檚 a little ode to the muse, to the grape. This is a little parable. A little story.听