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Let the World In: Prints by Robert Rauschenberg from the National Gallery of Art and Related Collections

October 28, 2007 - March 30, 2008

 

Robert Rauschenberg's boundless experimentation and his rich collaborations with talented printers will provide the focus for Let the World In: Prints by Robert Rauschenberg from the National Gallery of Art and Related Collections. The exhibition will present 58 outstanding prints, including some never before seen in a museum, on view at the National Gallery of Art, October 28, 2007, through March 30, 2008, in the Gallery's West Building prints and drawings galleries.

"The National Gallery of Art is fortunate to have more than 400 prints by Robert Rauschenberg in its collection," said Earl A. Powell III, director, National Gallery of Art. "This exhibition will feature the lithographs, screenprints, and intaglios of an artist who has sustained extraordinary creative powers across more than five decades and who has launched printmaking in new directions through his experiments in collaborative workshop environments."

This exhibition is organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington.

 

The Exhibition

The exhibition takes its title from a statement made by the art historian Leo Steinberg, who wrote that Rauschenberg's art "let the world in again," referring to the artist's integration of everyday objects and his use of representation at a time when abstraction dominated.

It will be arranged chronologically in five galleries, starting with Rauschenberg's prints from the early 1960s and ending in the current decade. Works to be shown come from many generous donors to the Gallery and will be augmented by select promised gifts and loans.

Gifts on view from the artist and the print publisher Gemini G.E.L.-- an important print workshop and publisher in Los Angeles -- will include Source (Speculations) (1996), a fusion of disparate images such as a clothesline and Stonehenge, and Vamp (2000), which incorporates Rauschenberg's photographic images of street life taken when he traveled to Marrakech in 1999. He was in Moroccoto take photographs for his Gemini projects. The recent acquisition, Stunt Man II (1962) completes the series and will be on view with Stunt Man I (1962) and Stunt Man III (1962).

Booster (1967), a key work produced at Gemini G.E.L. features a six-foot-high x-ray image of Rauschenberg's body. It was the largest hand-pulled, single-sheet print ever made at the time, challenging painting's dominance as a medium. Seemingly random images suffuse Booster, including a chair, an astronomical calendar, two drills, and a photograph of a man in the midst of a long jump -- offering viewers an opportunity to bring their own interpretation to the work.

Examples from the vivid Soviet/American Array (1988) series will be on display, as well as Preview (1974) whose iconic images -- two antique cars surrounding a Greek kouros -- are printed on layers of gauzy fabric that shift with the slightest breeze, causing corresponding shifts in appearance. Two works from the artist's Ruminations series will be included. 'topher (1999) and Big and Little Bullys (1999), are both gifts from the National Gallery Collectors Committee. These rich, tonal images present the artist and his family and reveal Rauschenberg at his most meditative.

On loan from Rauschenberg will be the first state of his seminal print Accident (1963), a work never before on view in a museum. In its final version, Rauschenberg printed from a lithographic stone that had accidentally broken, emphasizing creative forces beyond his control. Two prints and a working proof from the Bellini series (1987) -- the two prints on loan from the artist and Patricia Alper-Cohn and David I. Cohn, and the working proof on loan from print workshop Universal Limited Arts Edition (ULAE) -- reveal the artist's integration of his own photographs with images appropriated from great works of art from the past. A selection of Rauschenberg's Shirtboards (1991) -- based on 1952 collages that used cardboard from shirts that he had laundered while he was traveling in Italy and Morocco -- highlight the artist's eagerness to experiment with whatever materials are available and of interest to him.

 

The Artist

Rauschenberg (b. 1925) grew up in Port Arthur,Texas and received international attention starting in the 1950s when he expanded beyond abstract expressionism and minimalist monochromatic paintings. In works he called Combines, he fused everyday objects in a blend of painting and sculpture.

Beginning in the early 1960s, Rauschenberg created superb painterly prints filled with images he clipped from newspapers and magazines. As with the Combines, his prints brought representation and the commonplace into avant-garde practice. A water ring from a drinking glass, the face of a coin impressed onto paper, a traced outline from a cane, and the conscious inclusion of fingerprints all make reference to worldly objects and actions. Rauschenberg also branched out into new processes such as digital imaging as well as printing on unconventional papers, cardboard, fabric, and plastic.

In 1985, Rauschenberg traveled internationally to promote world peace and understanding through the vehicle of art. Calling his project the Rauschenberg Overseas Culture Interchange (ROCI), he visited and exhibited in Mexico, Chile,Venezuela, China, Tibet, Japan, Cuba, the Soviet Union, Berlin, and Malaysia. The culminating exhibition took place at the National Gallery of Art, Washington in 1991 as part of the Gallery's 50th anniversary celebration.

Many credit Rauschenberg with bridging the gap between abstract expressionism and pop art. Today his work is included in virtually every important international collection of contemporary art.

 

Curator and Related Activities

The exhibition curator is Charles Ritchie, associate curator of modern prints and drawings. An exhibition brochure written by Ritchie will be available to visitors free of charge.

On Sunday, November 18, 2007, at 6:30 p.m., the red fish blue fish percussion ensemble will perform a complete and expanded version of Sanctuary by Roger Reynolds, composed especially for performance in the East Building Auditorium and ground-floor atrium. The National Gallery of Art is collaborating with the Contemporary Music Forum and the National Endowment for the Arts to make possible the creation and performance of Sanctuary, which is presented with support from the Randy Hostetler Living Room Fund of Washington, DC.

Fully Awake: Black Mountain College (2007), a documentary by Cathryn Davis and Neeley House, will be screened on December 23, 26, 27, and 28 at 1:00 p.m in the East Building Auditorium. The film features archival photographs and interviews, exploring the college's influential role in the development of American art of the twentieth century. Rauschenberg attended Black Mountain College in the late 1940s.

On Sunday, January 27, 2008, the Central Bucks High School -- West Chamber Choir, under the direction of Dr. Joseph Ohrt, artistic director and conductor, will perform music by John Cage, Stephen Caldwell, Ola Gjeilo, Ohrt, and Matthew Sampson. The performance starts at6:30 p.m.in theWest Building, West Garden Court.

Gallery talks will be held December 9 at noon and 18 at 1 p.m.The Educators with Curators series explores the Rauschenberg exhibition on November 8, 13, and 15 at noon. All gallery talks start in the West Building Rotunda.

 

(above: Robert Rauschenberg (born 1925), Booster and 7 Studies: Booster, 1967, lithograph and screenprint, Published by Gemini G.E.L.,Los Angeles,California, sheet: 183 x 90.3 cm (72 1/16 x 35 9/16). National Gallery of Art,Washington, Gift of Dr. and Mrs. Maclyn E. Wade. Art copyright Robert Rauschenberg/Licensed by VAGA,New York,NY)

 

 

(above: Robert Rauschenberg (born 1925), Airport Series: Cat Paws, 1974, color relief and intaglio with collage on fabric, Published by Graphicstudio U.S.F,Tampa, Florida, sight size, irregular: 87.6 x 91.4 cm (34 1/2 x 36); mount: 106.7 x 111.8 cm (42 x 44). National Gallery of Art,Washington, Gift of Graphicstudio/University of South Florida and the Artist . Art copyright Robert Rauschenberg/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY)

 

(above: Robert Rauschenberg (born 1925), Soviet/American Array III, 1988, photogravure, Published by Universal Limited Art Editions, Bay Shore, New York, sheet: 223.8 x 134.9 cm (88 1/8 x 53 1/8). National Gallery of Art,Washington, Gift of Universal Limited Art Editions and the Artist,)



Resource Library readers may also enjoy:

the Press Event Opening Remarks (57:26 minutes) for Let the World In: Prints by Robert Rauschenberg from the National Gallery of Art and Related Collections hosted by Alan Shestack, deputy director, National Gallery of Art, with a tour by Charles Ritchie, associate curator of modern prints and drawings. National Gallery of Art.

TFAO also suggests these DVD or VHS videos:

Robert Rauschenberg: Inventive Genius is a 60-minute 1999 PBS / American Masters series video narrated by actor Dennis Hopper. Celebrates the life and work of American painter Robert Rauschenberg. As guru of the movement that transformed modern art Robert Rauschenberg is the ideal focus for an exploration of the revolution that has taken place in American art over the past 45 years...the revolution that he initiated. A rich mixture of visual images and engaging commentary examines the life of this revolutionary American painter. 1999. 57 min. DVD 4436; also VHS Video/C 6328. Available from Media Resources Center, Library, University of California, Berkeley.

Robert Rauschenberg: Man At Work. 57 minutes, filmed in 1997. Rauschenberg's "groundbreaking works, at times combining painting, sculpture and household items, were a major influence on the Pop Art schools. Filmed on location at his Florida island home, this documentary presents Rauschenberg discussing his art and his friendships with such notables s John Cage and Jasper Johns, and also offers the first look in its entirety at his 790-foot-long '1/4 Mile Piece.'" quoe from turnerclassic.moviesunlimited.com. DVD. A look at Robert Rauschenberg, one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. For the last fifty years his art has encompassed all manner of experimentation and a vast array of media, including silkscreen, printmaking, photography, and current technologies. His collaborations with Merce Cunningham, John Cage, and Trisha Brown have greatly influenced contemporary dance and performance. The highlight of this program is Rauschenberg's autobiographical work, the multi-paneled 1/4 Mile or 2 Furlong Piece, begun in 1981, seen here for the first time in its entirety. c1997. 58 min. Video/C 5997. Available from Media Resources Center, Library, University of California, Berkeley.

TFAO does not maintain a lending library of videos or sell videos. Click here for information on how to borrow or purchase copies of VHS videos and DVDs listed in TFAO's Videos -DVD/VHS, an authoritative guide to videos in VHS and DVD format

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rev. 12/27/07

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