I met him during my senior year in high school. It was for this exhibition show with Darryl Pottorf at the Butler Institute of American Art in Youngstown Ohio. It had profound impact on my growth as an artist. I find myself constantly inspired by his work. His vegetable dye transfer pieces are huge in scale and amazing! I’ll never forget that day. He is and always will be in my top most influential artists.
Research is about asking questions. Why was his work relevant? What does his work explain in the context of his time? ... As teachers we not only have answers to share with our students, but above all we have tools to stimulate research. I'm sure your teacher invited you to take this video as a starting point to explore all the questions and share the answers later in class.
"What Rauschenberg showed us is that everyday things, the detritus of life, can be quite beautiful." "Perhaps the greatest collagist who every lived." "He investigated the parameters of art, the 'bottom line' of art-what is the least thing you need? What can you get rid of and still have a work of art?" "He is one of the first people to explode the painting into the world of the viewer." "His work lies in the balance between the real world and the [traditional] work of art." "Collaboration was so important to him, where so many artists work in isolation." "His attitude about the visual world was like John Cage's attitude toward sound-everything is part of our visual world so that everything can be drawn into a work of art." There, I've done the work for you.
I met him in 1996 at Pace Wildenstein gallery 1996..we like each other i m m e d i a t e l y and talked about our mutual friend NICO ,German singer icon. Pace Wildenstein B,H.was interested in my art but closed their Beverly Hills gallery and suggested my art was too sophisticated for B.H.and I should recontact them in NYC.....Unfortunately Rauschenberg died before I was able to go to NYC.
I met him during my senior year in high school. It was for this exhibition show with Darryl Pottorf at the Butler Institute of American Art in Youngstown Ohio. It had profound impact on my growth as an artist. I find myself constantly inspired by his work. His vegetable dye transfer pieces are huge in scale and amazing! I’ll never forget that day. He is and always will be in my top most influential artists.
I like how my teacher sent us this for research when it's just a bunch of different people talking about how great he was without explaining anything
Research is about asking questions. Why was his work relevant? What does his work explain in the context of his time? ...
As teachers we not only have answers to share with our students, but above all we have tools to stimulate research. I'm sure your teacher invited you to take this video as a starting point to explore all the questions and share the answers later in class.
"What Rauschenberg showed us is that everyday things, the detritus of life, can be quite beautiful."
"Perhaps the greatest collagist who every lived."
"He investigated the parameters of art, the 'bottom line' of art-what is the least thing you need? What can you get rid of and still have a work of art?"
"He is one of the first people to explode the painting into the world of the viewer."
"His work lies in the balance between the real world and the [traditional] work of art."
"Collaboration was so important to him, where so many artists work in isolation."
"His attitude about the visual world was like John Cage's attitude toward sound-everything is part of our visual world so that everything can be drawn into a work of art."
There, I've done the work for you.
AWESOME! Thanks for showing.
Kurt Schwitters and Robert Raauschenberg, my masters.
;o]
The woman in the video is Cornelia Parker.
She is awesome.
I met him in 1996 at Pace Wildenstein gallery 1996..we like each other i m m e d i a t e l y and talked about our mutual friend NICO ,German singer icon.
Pace Wildenstein B,H.was interested in my art but closed their Beverly Hills gallery and suggested my art was too sophisticated for B.H.and I should recontact them in NYC.....Unfortunately Rauschenberg died before I was able to go to NYC.
Marco una época.
Who is the lady in the video? Thanks!
. .
Erase de kooning!
I had to watch it for school trash
saaaaaaaame
my writing teacher
and we hav to write scentences about it
Like, who even watch this in free time. Had to watch for school .
@@artislife4497 im watching it for school but im sure plenty of people watch this after falling in the famous youtube rabbit hole
Auschenberg? More like Heisenberg
No dislikes, wow.
Rawr xD that's I love you in dinosaur.
Alison Groen I already did
Russian burger?
art is fart
Victoria Zahl and full of tarts at times.