BEIJING, May 14 (Xinhuanet) -- Robert Rauschenberg,
famous American artist, who was believed to be the biggest innovator in art
after Jackson Pollock, died on Monday at age 82, according to media reports.
The cause was heart failure, said Arne Glimcher,
chairman of PaceWildenstein, the Manhattan gallery that
represents Rauschenberg.
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Seminal North American pop artist Robert
Rauschenberg stands in front of one of his works, a bicycle illuminated
with neon, at the presentation of his retrospective exhibit in Bilbao's
Guggenheim Museum in this Nov. 20, 1998 file photo.(Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
A painter, photographer, printmaker, choreographer,
performer, set designer and, in later years, even a composer, Rauschenberg
defied the traditional idea that an artist stick to one medium or style.
Together with painter Jasper Johns, with whom he was
romantically linked, Rauschenberg was the most important American artist to
emerge into prominence in the 1950s.
Those most famous creations would be his "combines"
-- giant collages of found objects that hover somewhere between painting and
sculpture.
Rauschenberg made 162 combines between 1954 and 1964,
and they remain the most highly regarded and influential body of work by the
unusually prolific artist.
In the early 1970s, the great art historian and
critic Leo Steinberg said Rauschenberg had "let the world in again."
The largest collection of combines -- 11 works -- is
housed in Los Angeles at the Museum of Contemporary Art. Chief curator Paul
Schimmel organized an exhibition of 70 combines in 2005, which traveled to New
York's Metropolitan Museum of Art and to museums in Paris and Stockholm.
Although he is famous for his combines and
silk-screen paintings, it is also significant that Rauschenberg was the last
artist who believed that art could change the world -- and he devoted more than
a decade to proving it.
(Agencies)