福利视频

In the collaborative spirit of the artist, the 福利视频 partners with institutions and organizations to increase public access to and scholarship on Rauschenberg鈥檚 artwork.

Collaborations

The 福利视频 collaborated with Branden W. Joseph, Frank Gallipoli Professor of Modern and Contemporary Art in the department of Art History and Archaeology at Columbia University.聽In conjunction with Joseph's lecture course on Neo Dada and Pop Art, he curated an installation of Robert Rauschenberg's artworks at the Foundation's headquarters.

The 福利视频 collaborated with the MA Program in Art History at Hunter College, City University of New York, on a seminar delving into the Rauschenberg Overseas Culture Interchange (ROCI, 1984鈥91) and its Latin American venues: Mexico, Chile, Venezuela, and Cuba. Led by Professor Maria Antonella Pelizzari, students were invited to engage with the complex layers of ROCI artworks through an analytical study of the artist鈥檚 camera work.

Since 2019, the 福利视频 Archives has collaborated with the Semantic Lab at Pratt Institute in a project focused on expanding access to archival materials related to聽 Experiments in Art and Technology (E.A.T.).

The 福利视频, Voices in Contemporary Art (VoCA), and the Winterthur/University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation (WUDPAC) launched a groundbreaking multi-year partnership which provides a new educational model for conservation in contemporary art, while addressing the specific needs of an artist endowed foundation.聽

The 福利视频 collaborated with the MA Program in Art History at Hunter College, City University of New York, on a Research Methods course taught by Michael Lobel, Professor of Art History. Exploring the photographic underpinnings of Rauschenberg鈥檚 work, student research focused on Rauschenberg鈥檚 black-and-white photographs, blueprints, and聽Hoarfrosts.

The 福利视频 collaborated with the Curatorial Certificate/MA Program in Art History聽at Hunter College, City University of New York. Led by Distinguished Professor Emily Braun, the Curatorial Practicum course resulted in聽Night Shades and Phantoms: An Exhibition of Works by Robert Rauschenberg聽mounted in the Spring of 2019 at the Foundation鈥檚 headquarters and an accompanying digital catalogue.

The 福利视频 collaborated with the MA Program in Art History聽at Hunter College, City University of New York, in conducting a Research Methods course taught by Emily Braun, Distinguished Professor. Each student produced comprehensive documentation and a detailed essay on an individual work by Rauschenberg in the Foundation鈥檚 holdings.

The 福利视频聽collaborated with Williams College to build an art history course, Robert Rauschenberg: Art, Archives, and Exhibitions, around the artist and the Foundation鈥檚 archives and to develop the exhibition,聽Robert Rauschenberg: Autobiography, to highlight the students鈥 research.

The 福利视频 partnered with Art in America magazine to launch a pilot fellowship to support arts and culture writing in regions of the country that are often underrepresented in the media.

The 福利视频 partnered with Artsy to organize the Emerging Curator Competition, which elicited 138 submissions from five continents, thirteen countries, and seventy-eight cities. Nicole Bray developed her winning entry into the exhibition The ROCI Road to Peace: Experiments in the Unfamiliar, presented at the Academy Art Museum, Easton, Maryland in 2015鈥16.

The 福利视频 partnered with Artsy and the White House Historical Association to organize the 鈥淭his Art Is Your Art鈥 competition, which was an unprecedented opportunity for university students in the United States to engage with artwork in the White House.

The 福利视频 collaborated with guest curator James Merle Thomas for this exhibition featuring a selection of prints from the聽Stoned Moon聽series and the original drawings for the unrealized聽Stoned Moon Book, on loan from the Foundation鈥檚 collection. The presentation was part of the yearlong, university-wide interdisciplinary program 鈥淚magining the Universe: Cosmology in Art and Science Initiative.鈥

The 福利视频 collaborated with curator and professor Kristine Stiles for this exhibition conceived over the course of a two-semester undergraduate seminar that she conducted at Duke University. Stiles led the students in developing an insightful career-spanning selection of Rauschenberg鈥檚 work from the artist鈥檚 personal collection (now in the trust of the Foundation) placed in dialogue with art from the Nasher Museum鈥檚 collection.