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Robert Rauschenberg - Strawboss

Robert Rauschenberg

Robert Rauschenberg’s 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.

The celebrated Combines, begun in the mid-1950s, brought real-world images and objects into the realm of abstract painting and countered sanctioned divisions between painting and sculpture. These works established the artist’s ongoing dialogue between mediums, between the handmade and the readymade, and between the gestural brushstroke and the mechanically reproduced image. Rauschenberg’s lifelong commitment to collaboration—with performers, printmakers, engineers, writers, artists, and artisans from around the world—is a further manifestation of his expansive artistic philosophy.

Source:
https://www.rauschenbergfoundation.org/artist and the Chapman Escalette


Description of the Work

Robert Rauschenberg, one of the most prominent American artists of the 20th century, was invited to Cape Canaveral by NASA in 1969 for the historic Apollo 11 mission launch. During his visit, Rauschenberg had the privilege of meeting the astronauts and other personnel working at NASA. He was granted access to a plethora of documents and photographs that captured the creation of the Apollo mission and the event itself. Using these images and his own drawings, Rauschenberg created a series of 34 lithographs that served as a tribute to this milestone in space exploration history. The San Francisco Museum of Art described his trip as a turning point in his career, one that provided him with a fresh outlook and an invigorated passion for creating art.

Strawboss (1970) is one of these 34 prints which captures the essence of space exploration through a unique perspective. The print is fairly large, sitting at 30 x 22 in which allows for many of the details to come through in good scale. Through close-up images and internal photographs of the module and NASA center, the viewer is taken into the creation and key features of the Apollo 11 module. In the top right-hand corner, the full module is on display, dramatically emerging from dense hashing marks. Beneath are the sides and mounting of the module which produce a polka-dot-like pattern in multiple registers. Below this are other wheels, cogs, and plans from the mission in a collage-like format. Various expressive lines and drawing is superimposed on top, giving the piece a sense of movement. The contrast and black and white nature of the print emphasize the drama of the event.

An Interpretation by Bella Ocaña


More works by Robert Rauschenberg in the Chapman Escalette

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