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Media Contacts:
Gabriel Riera: 305.375.1706
griera@miamidade.gov
Miami Art Museum Presents
Modern Master Robert Rauschenberg
As Part Of New Work Series
Robert Rauschenberg
March 4–July 3, 2005
Miami, Florida—Miami Art Museum presents the
work of Robert Rauschenberg in the first exhibition
of his paintings in Miami since 1984, when MAM—then
called the Center for Fine Arts—presented his
quarter-mile-long painted opus, The
2 Furlong Piece.
Robert Rauschenberg consists of seven to eight new
large-scale paintings from the artist’s current
series Scenarios and will be on view from March 4 to
July 3, 2005. The works are based on photographs taken
by the artist, primarily in the environs of his home
in Captiva, Florida. Robert Rauschenberg is organized
by Miami Art Museum and curated by Assistant Director
for Programs/Senior Curator Peter Boswell as part of
New Work, a series of projects by leading contemporary
artists.
Robert Rauschenberg is an acknowledged American master
who has been living in Florida since 1970. Throughout
his career, Rauschenberg has been a pioneer in the
use of photographic reproduction in painting and printmaking.
In the 1990s, he developed a unique, highly personal
transfer process that has allowed him to continue to
use his own photographs as the basis for large-scale
works of art while exploring environmentally-friendly
materials. The results are a surprisingly intimate
reflection of the beauty and joy Rauschenberg has found
in everyday life for the past 50 years.
To create Scenarios, Rauschenberg digitally scans
his photographs, manipulates them in the computer—usually
through enlargement, cropping and image reversal—and
prints them on plastic sheets using ink jet printers
and water-soluble pigments. He then uses water to transfer
these images onto new support surfaces made of layers
of laminated paper mounted on aluminum. The moistening
of the images and the pressure applied during the transfer
process are both done by hand. The results are large-scale
works that combine photographic imagery with the type
of gesture and spontaneity associated with expressionist
painting.
“Throughout the course of a very productive
career, this modern master has continued to challenge
the art world with his creativity,” said MAM
Director Suzanne Delehanty. “As a resident of
Florida, Mr. Rauschenberg draws on the rich imagery
of the ever-changing, multi-faceted landscape that
defines our special corner of the world. We are extremely
pleased to present the art of Robert Rauschenberg to
South Florida audiences with this impressive collection
of new works.”
In conjunction with the exhibition, a fully-illustrated
48-page catalogue with an essay by Pulitzer Prize winning
novelist Oscar Hijuelos will be available at the MAM
Store. The catalogue Rauschenberg,
Scenarios, was published
by PaceWildenstein, Rauschenberg’s gallery in
New York, on the occasion of the artist’s recent
showing there. In his discussion of Rauschenberg's
photo-based, large-scale panels, Hijuelos states the
Scenarios "are massive 'super' multilayered paintings
that tell stories and cry out about American life;
they are panoramas that have an epic quality."
Also available in the MAM Store will be Rauschenberg:
Art and Life Revised Edition by Mary Lynn Kotz, published by Harry N. Abrams, Inc. In this new edition, author
Mary Lynn Kotz has extensively revised her authoritative
biography of the artist to include an evaluation of
some of the approximately 2,000 new works he has created
in the past ten years.
About the Artist
Robert Rauschenberg (b. 1925, Port Arthur, TX) briefly
attended the University of Texas and served in the
U.S. Navy during World War II prior to studying art.
Between the years of 1947 and 1952, Rauschenberg attended
the Kansas City Art Institute, the Academie Julien
in Paris, the Arts Student League in New York and studied
with Josef Albers at Black Mountain College in North
Carolina where he formed friendships with John Cage,
Merce Cunningham and David Tudor. In 1951 Rauschenberg
was invited to exhibit at the Betty Parsons Gallery
in New York City, and two years later he created what
were to become his well-known “combines,” works
that incorporated painting and a variety of found objects.
The juxtaposition of different media (lithography,
painting, photography, silk-screening and sculpture)
and their interplay comprise Rauschenberg's chief interests,
and throughout his career his work has been marked
by a sense of experimentation and whimsy. During the
1950s Rauschenberg also began his lifelong involvement
and affiliation with theatre and dance, designing sets
and costumes for a variety of productions worldwide.
Rauschenberg's work has been the subject of numerous
solo shows and retrospectives around the world including
those organized by The Jewish Museum, New York (1963);
Whitechapel Gallery, London (1964); Walker Art Center,
Minneapolis (1965); The Museum of Modern Art, New York
(1966, 1969); Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (1968); Israel
Museum, Jerusalem (1974); National Collection of Fine
Arts, Washington, DC (and tour, 1976-7); Staatliche
Kunsthalle, Berlin (1980) and a tour including the
Louisiana Museum, Copenhagen (1980) and the Tate Gallery,
London (1981); Centre Pompidou, Musée National
d'Art Moderne, Paris (1981); Fondation Maeght, Saint-Paul-de-Vence,
France (1984); the 41st Venice Biennale (1984); Fundacion
Juan March, Madrid and Fundacion Joan Miró,
Barcelona (both 1985); Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston
(and tour 1986-7); The Metropolitan Museum of Art,
New York (1987); Whitney Museum of American Art (1990);
The Menil Collection, Houston (and tour 1991-3); Solomon
R. Guggenheim Museum, New York (and tour 1997-9); the
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (2002); and the Wadsworth
Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford (2004).
The artist's work can be found in over 70 public museum
collections throughout the United States and abroad.
He currently works and lives in Florida.
About the Curator
Peter Boswell has been Assistant Director for Programs/Senior
Curator at MAM since 1999. He is responsible for the
growth of MAM’s permanent collection as well
as the museum’s exhibitions, educational programs
and publications. Since his appointment at MAM, Mr.
Boswell has led the curatorial efforts behind the exhibitions Figuratively
Speaking: Selection from the Permanent Collection (2005); Beyond
Geometry: Experiments in Form, 1940s–70s (2004); Chuck
Close Prints: Process and Collaboration (2004); Museums
for a New Millennium: Concepts, Projects, Buildings (2003); Between
Art and Life: Joseph Cornell to Gabriel Orozco (2003); New
Work: Roberto Behar and Rosario Marquardt (2003); Miami
Currents: Linking Collection and Community (2002);
New Work: Teresita Fernández (2002); and New
Work: Donald Lipski (2002). Prior to joining MAM, Mr.
Boswell served for three years as Heiskell Arts Director
at the American Academy in Rome and for 10 years served
on the curatorial staff of the Walker Art Center in
Minneapolis. Mr. Boswell holds a BA in Art History
from the University of California, Berkeley, and an
MA in Art History from Stanford University.
Related Publications and Programs
Gallery Notes
This illustrated, take-home brochure provides background
information on Robert Rauschenberg’s Scenarios,
and the use of photographic images since the 1950s.
Essay by MAM Assistant Director for Programs/Senior
Curator Peter Boswell. Available in the galleries.
Free.
Members Preview and Opening Reception
Thursday, March 3, 6 – 8:30pm
Join the artist for the opening reception of his exhibition
at MAM
DJ, hors d’oeuvres, donation bar
Illustrated talk by exhibition curator, Peter Boswell,
from 6:30 to 7pm
MAM members free; non-members $10.
RSVP via email at MAMRSVP@miamidade.gov or call 305.375.1704.
Sundays are Free at MAM
12 - 5pm
Guided tours of the exhibition every Sunday at 2pm.
Sponsored by The Miami Herald/El Nuevo Herald.
Second Saturdays are Free for Families
Second Saturday of every month, 1 – 4pm
Drop in to enjoy fun, interactive programs. Families
of all ages explore MAM together, find inspiration
to create works of art, and participate in hands-on
activities led by Gallery Teachers and student volunteers.
March 12
Geomazing Origami
How many different geometric shapes can you find in
the exhibition Beyond Geometry? Join us for an origami
(art of folded paper) demonstration in the hands-on
workshop and construct your favorite shapes with special
paper.
April 9
Beyond Geometry Family Festival
Organized by Miami Art Museum, this special “Second
Saturdays are Free for Families” day will fill
the Miami-Dade Cultural Plaza with a variety of math-related
games and activities. In celebration of MAM’s
featured exhibit Beyond Geometry, visitors will explore
how artists have used geometry and mathematical sequences
in creative and surprising ways.
May 14
Paint in Paradise
Inspired by the work of Robert Rauschenberg.
June 11
Silly Stick Puppets
Based on the Figuratively Speaking exhibition.
# # #
Media Contact:
Gabriel Riera
305.375.1706
griera@miamidade.gov
Accredited by the American Association of Art Museums,
Miami Art Museum is sponsored in part by the State
of Florida, Department of State, Division of Cultural
Affairs and the Florida Arts Council, and the National
Endowment for the Arts; with the support of the Miami-Dade
County Department of Cultural Affairs, the Cultural
Affairs Council, the Mayor and the Board of County
Commissioners.
101 West Flagler St
Miami, FL 33130
305-375-3000
miamiartmuseum.org
Secure Garage Parking
$3 at 50 NW 2nd Ave
between Flagler St and NW 1st St
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