Robert Rauschenberg, "Rebus," 1955, oil, pencil, paper and
fabric on canvas, 8 by 10 feet 101/2 inches. Partial and
promised gift of Jo Carole and Ronald S. Lauder and purchase,
2005. ©Robert Rauschenberg, Courtesy Pace Wildenstein.
MOMA Acquires Rauschenberg Painting
The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) has acquired "Rebus," 1955, a
major early combine painting by Robert Rauschenberg (American,
born 1925), one of the most influential artists of the Twentieth
Century.
The three-panel combine painting, nearly 11 feet long, will
augment the ten paintings and 183 works on paper by Rauschenberg
already held by MoMA, creating one of the world's most
significant museum collections of this artist's work. "Rebus" is
painted with oil on canvas with applied paper, fabric, pencil,
newspaper and printed reproductions and is anticipated to go on
view in the fourth floor painting and sculpture galleries in
mid-July.
"In 1952, The Museum of Modern Art was the first institution to
collect work by Robert Rauschenberg, and we remain committed to
the work of this extraordinary artist," said MoMA director Glenn
D. Lowry. "Rauschenberg's impact on the art world and continuing
influence on succeeding generations of artists is enormous. We
are profoundly grateful to Jo Carole and Ronald Lauder for their
generosity to make this acquisition possible."
John Elderfield, the museum's Marie-Josée and Henry Kravis Chief
Curator of Painting and Sculpture, said, "The museum's first
director, Alfred H. Barr Jr, had hoped to acquire Rauschenberg's
'Rebus' in the early 1960s but was unable to do so. We are
delighted that this great work has now finally entered the
collection. 'Rebus' is broadly acknowledged as a landmark in the
development of Rauschenberg's art in moving beyond the nostalgia
of his earlier combine paintings toward a new, more specific
means of representation of images that might be encountered in
the urban environment. The images - from photographs of running
athletes to a comic strip and a reproduction of Botticelli's
'Birth of Venus' - jostle with each other, the artist says, 'like
pedestrians on a street.'"
The period following Rauschenberg's arrival in New York in 1949
was one of his most prolific. This fertility was matched by the
work's innovative qualities. By 1955, when "Rebus" was made,
Rauschenberg had produced four bodies of significant work: "White
Paintings," 1950-51, "Black Paintings," 1951-54, "Red Paintings,"
1953-54, and the first of the combines, a term coined by
Rauschenberg to describe his technique of attaching cast-off
items, such as rubber tires or old furniture, to a traditional
support, often splashed with paint. The artist said that "Rebus"
was intended to be "a record of the immediate environment and
time."
In mocking the seriousness of high art, Rauschenberg anticipated
an attitude that would become more widespread among successive
generations of artists, for example, the Pop artists who
appreciated Rauschenberg's relish for everyday objects.
"Rebus" joins four other major early works by Rauschenberg in the
museum's collection: "Bed," 1955, the artist's most controversial
combine; "Rhyme," 1956, a smaller intense work; "Factum II,"
1957, one of a pair of paintings using identical images; and
"First Landing Jump," 1961, a combine with bulky sculptural
elements and the first Rauschenberg to incorporate the wiring of
an electric light fixture as a visual element in the work. In
addition, the museum owns six later paintings by Rauschenberg and
the famous work on paper "Thirty-Four Illustrations for Dante's
Inferno," 1959-60.
"Rebus" is a partial and promised gift of Jo Carole and Ronald S.
Lauder and museum purchase.
MoMA is at 11 West 53rd Street.
For information, 212-7080-9431 or www.moma.org.