Friday, March 02, 2007

Robert Rauschenberg @ Moderne Museet


Robert Rauschenberg: Combines is perhaps the most important solo exhibition of this artist’s works ever to be shown. The works are best described as free-standing or wall-mounted objects combining painting and sculpture, produced between 1954 and 1964, a prolific period in Rauschenberg’s long and outstanding oeuvre. Rauschenberg was boundless in his choice of materials, combining newspaper cuttings and photographs, like the cubists, dadaists and surrealists, with objects found on his own rubbish dump – of which Coca-Cola bottles, pinups, rubber tyres and stuffed animals are but a few examples.

It is no exaggeration to say that Rauschenberg redefined American art when he invented the Combine. With these works he exploded the traditional boundary between painting and sculpture, and instead brought the street into the studio. Rauschenberg resumed the dialogue with the outer world that the preceding artist generation, the abstract expressionists, had consistently excluded from their art. The 162 combines he created during a ten-year period also demonstrate his influence on later isms and genres, such as pop art, neo-dada, assemblage, fluxus, Viennese actionism, arte povera and performance art.

Robert Rauschenberg (originally Milton) was born in Port Arthur, Texas, in 1925. After studying pharmacology at the University of Texas he was drafted into the Navy and spent many years caring for mental patients at various Navy hospitals in California. He started painting portraits of his fellow navy recruits that they could send back home to their families. In the late 1940s, he studied at Kansas City Art Institute and at Académie Julian in Paris, where he met the artist Susan Weil, whom he married shortly after. Rauschenberg went on to study at Black Mountain College in North Carolina, where the famous artist and Bauhaus teacher Joseph Albers was on the staff. It was at Black Mountain that Rauschenberg forged his seminal friendship with the avant-garde choreographer and dancer Merce Cunningham and the legendary composers John Cage and David Tudor. It was there, also, that he participated in Cage’s Theater Piece #1 which is now considered to be the world’s first happening. Robert Rauschenberg currently lives in Captiva in Florida.

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Spencer Finch @ Brandstrom & Sten


Brändström & Stene gallery, run by Andreas Brändström and Jan Stene, focuses on work by young and contemporary artists.

The gallery opened in 1993 and has exhibited artists such as Isaac Julien, Olafur Eliasson, Tracey Emin, Spencer Finch, Carl Michael von Hausswolff, Jeppe Hein, Henrik Håkansson, Clay Ketter, Jim Shaw, Sam Taylor Wood, Cory Arcangel, Marnie Weber and Elin Wickström.

The goal of the gallery is to support Scandinavian artists in the international arena and to present international art to the Scandinavian market.

Since 1994 the gallery has participated in numerous international art fairs, including Art Basel, Art Chicago, Art Cologne, Art Forum Berlin and The Armory NYC. In addition, Brändström & Stene Gallery was one of the founders of the highly Smart Show Art Fair in Stockholm in the 1990s.

The gallery is situated in central Stockholm and occupies 500 square meters of exhibition space.

Brändström & Stene
Hudiksvallsgatan 6
S-113 30 Stockholm
Sweden

Phone:
Fax:

Present exhibitions
Spencer Finch
New Works
I fokus…
Ylva Ogland
Sisela & Ylva
March 1 – April 8

Opening hours
Thu-Fri 12.00-18.00
Sat-Sun 12.00-16.00

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