Robert Rauschenberg
Bamhue-Roci Japan, 1986-1987
Robert Rauschenberg
signed and inscribed Proof
bamboo, neon, brass box, fittings and cable
90 by 4 by 10.7 in.
228.6 by 10.2 by 27.3 cm.
Executed in 1986-1987, this work was published by Graphicstudio & Rauschenberg Overseas Culture Interchange, pubs.
signed and inscribed Proof
bamboo, neon, brass box, fittings and cable
90 by 4 by 10.7 in.
228.6 by 10.2 by 27.3 cm.
Executed in 1986-1987, this work was published by Graphicstudio & Rauschenberg Overseas Culture Interchange, pubs.
228.6 x 10.2 x 27.3 cm
Robert Rauschenberg worked in a wide range of mediums including painting, sculpture, prints, photography, and performance, over the span of six decades. He emerged on the American art scene at...
Robert Rauschenberg worked in a wide range of mediums including painting, sculpture, prints, photography, and performance, over the span of six decades. He emerged on the American art scene at the time that Abstract Expressionism was dominant, and through the course of his practice he challenged the gestural abstract painting and the model of the heroic, self-expressive artist championed by that movement.
His art has always been one of thoughtful inclusion. Working in a wide range of subjects, styles, materials, and techniques, Rauschenberg has been called a forerunner of essentially every postwar movement since Abstract Expressionism. He remained, however, independent of any particular affiliation. At the time that he began making art in the late 1940s and early 1950s, his belief that “painting relates to both art and life” presented a direct challenge to the prevalent modernist aesthetic.
His art has always been one of thoughtful inclusion. Working in a wide range of subjects, styles, materials, and techniques, Rauschenberg has been called a forerunner of essentially every postwar movement since Abstract Expressionism. He remained, however, independent of any particular affiliation. At the time that he began making art in the late 1940s and early 1950s, his belief that “painting relates to both art and life” presented a direct challenge to the prevalent modernist aesthetic.
Provenance
Sothebys Purchased Contemporary Part I And Part II1 2 September 2007 • New YorkSale Sale Number: N08339 USD 46,000Robert RauschenbergBamhue-Roci Japan
signed and inscribed Proof
bamboo, neon, brass box, fittings and cable90 by 4 by 10.7 in.228.6 by 10.2 by 27.3 cm.Executed in 1986-1987, this work was published by Graphicstudio & Rauschenberg Overseas Culture Interchange, pubs.
1
of
37
Courtesy of 10 Chancery Lane Gallery
Copyright The Artist