Eager Not to Miss the Rauschenberg Retrospective at the Tate Modern, Graham Hooper Guides us Through This Extraordinary Show.
The last image in the 412-page catalogue for Tate Modern’s current high profile retrospective, “Robert Rauschenberg”, shows one on the artists most iconic ‘combines’ in x-ray. Called Monogram, it combines sculpture (a stuffed goat and a car tyre) with painting and general mixed media collage to create, as the name suggests, a very personal motif. The alchemy of hugely diverse materials (newspaper cuttings, metal, wood and plaster, with a shoe and tennis ball all set on casters) and in such a playful and daring mix is probably just as provocative and exciting now as it was back in late 50’s America. The fact that it is no ordinary photograph, but an x-ray no less, highlights the inventive use of technology and the desire to see the world differently that was so characteristic of this all-rounder artist.
Born in the small oil-town of Port Arthur, Texas, where being an artist wasn’t ever a career option, Rauschenberg only discovered the possibility after a chance encounter with art in a gallery whilst on leave from the Navy. He recognised a Gainsborough as the design from a reproduction on the back of a set of playing cards. Such experiences, plus his formative years in Post-War Texas, were to influence the rest of his prolific and diverse creative output over the next six decades. Port Arthur, now the site of a significant oil refinery, always had the petro-chemical industry in its soul, and Rauschenberg’s work is no different. Throughout his long and productive career oil, cars, tyres all reappear to remind us of his roots.
This story is from the January 2017 edition of Ink Pellet.
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This story is from the January 2017 edition of Ink Pellet.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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