Showing posts with label rauschenberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rauschenberg. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

RAUSCHENBERG, A HUGE INFLUENCE ON THE ART WORLD AND ME TOO!

Robert Rauschenberg 
The University of South Florida drew some of the finest art professors from across the United States and we also attracted many wonderful guest speakers.  I had the opportunity to personally meet Josef Albers and Carl Sandberg.  The art department was all about what was happening in New York in the art scene, trying to stay as current and up to date as possible.  AND RAUSCHENBERG WAS HAPPENING! Also Jasper Johns, Roy Litchenstein and many, many others. New York was the center of the art world and an exciting creative place. The end of the 60's and the beginning of the 70's were formative years in the art world in the New York. And our professor's were trying their best to keep us abreast of the latest in NYC art world.
Robert Rauschenberg first pursued being a minister, then a pharmacist, but it wasn't until 1947 when in the Marines he found he had a skill for drawing and an artistic representation of the everyday.  He studied in Paris on the G.I. bill, but later left Europe for Black Mountain, North Carolina where there was an beginning art movement just in its embryonic stages.  The country's most visionary thinkers were teaching at Black Mountain College.  There Merce Cunningham(Dance), and John Cage( Music) and Rauschenberg(Art) began what would be an artistic revolution.  But, North Carolina life was soon to small for Rauschenberg who left for NYC.  And it was there he would find amid the excitement of city life, the full extent of what he would bring to the art world through his paintings.

Popular culture became an emphasis for him, as he moved away form the angst of the abstract expressionist world.  He found a new way of painting, by using materials traditionally outside of the artists reach.  He would use house paint, use a car wheel to make a print, or used found objects in his work. He created what he called his COMBINES which were meant to show the finding and forming of combinations in three dimensional collage.  These works cemented his place in art history.
Popular culture became an emphasis for him, as he moved away form the angst of the abstract expressionist world.  He found a new way of painting, by using materials traditionally outside of the artists reach.  He would use house paint, use a car wheel to make a print, or used found objects in his work. He created what he called his COMBINES which were meant to show the finding and forming of combinations in three dimensional collage.  These works cemented his place in art history.



Monday, December 31, 2012

NAME YOUR FAVORITE ARTISTS OR ART WORK

Lets start the new year naming our favorite artists or art work. 
 I will go first, then you can add yours.

Charles Demuth       Engine Number 5




Rauschenberg  Monogram
Claus Oldenburg  French Fries
Van Gogh        Starry Night
Calder             Circus
Cornell            Everything he did
Monet             Water lilles 
Duchamp         Re Mutt
Dali                 Psychedelic Toreado 
Picasso           Bull with Bicycle Handlebars
Demuth          Engine Number 5
Johns              Orange and Green American Flag


Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Collage/Pieces of our Lives

Collage


Is oft thought of as a sub class to painting, drawing and sculpture. It is truly interesting that part of the art world has taken that position with its wonderful rich history. I have loved collage most of my life. I think it actually started with watching my Mother put together family photo's with clipping out bits of embroidery or lace to enhance the presentation. I can remember how carefully she would set aside pieces of her favorite bits of material and thoughtfully arrange each vignette. I watched with awe, and remember thinking I didn't know you were allowed to combine photographs with other things. I had not seen it done in anyone else's home or other place. It was unique to me and seemed to allow me to think differently.
Africa is not always given its due to the history of collage. Picasso is given credit and Braque, but it is not always mentioned that Picasso drew many of his influences came from African art. Rauschenberg, Johns, Cornell were artist who brought collage into the modern art world. Now it is a mainstay trending over to assemblage and all types of mixed media and found object collage. Curators and judges no longer cast an eye of disdain, as in the past, but have accept video artists, installations and other innovations.
The history of art is change, innovation, and exploration. Bright colors were thought to be a horror is certain periods of art, impressionism was thought unskilled art, and Van Gogh's work was not accepted in his life time. So art is meant to be in constant evolution and more that the realistic representation of a scene or object. Art is meant to challenge us, make us think, and to inspire discovery and exploration.
For me collage and assemblage are the archeology of the present and future. There will be a time when people study our objects for hints of how we lived as a civilization. I love old, worn, used, touched, lived with objects: they speak to be of times just past and times present that are moving into the past. It is the visual poetry of our lives, our beings journey in time. We leave a mark, we leave evidence we were here, we worked, we lived, and we existed on this earth at this time.

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