Research Catalog

Robert Rauschenberg : jammers.

Title
Robert Rauschenberg : jammers.
Author
Rauschenberg, Robert, 1925-2008
Publication
London : Gagosian Gallery, 2013.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library N6537.R27 A4 2013q OversizeOff-site

Details

Additional Authors
  • Keefe, Alexander.
  • Anfam, David.
  • Gagosian Gallery (London, England)
Description
90 pages : illustrations (chiefly color); 32 cm
Summary
In the early 1970s, Rauschenberg moved his permanent studio from New York City to Captiva Island, off the Gulf coast of Florida (Today, this site is in use as the artists' residency program of the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation). This relocation marked a shift from the gritty urban detritus that had been the basis of much of the earlier work to a rhapsodic embrace of color and geometric abstraction in a wholly new vernacular language. The Jammers series (1975?76), its title a direct reference to the Windjammer sailing vessel, is Rauschenberg?s salute to his new island life. In 1975, he also went to India to investigate textiles and papermaking, and the inspiration of this new and exotic context is evident in the use of vivid colors and nuanced textures of cotton, muslin, and silk. For the most part, the Jammers comprise stitched fabrics in pure, solid colors, affixed to rattan poles or hung directly and loosely on the wall; whereas in works such as Sprout (1975) and Caliper (1976), the unadorned poles are the principal formal element, propped against the wall. Departing from Rauschenberg?s densely collaged imagery or muscular, layered materials, the Jammers are simple and light, focusing on the transparency and seductiveness of veil-like fabrics, that are lent sculptural structure by the cloth-covered poles or other found objects. In Quarterhorse (1975), segments of blue, green, tan and yellow cloth evoke sandy beaches, palm trees, and bright sunshine. In Index (1976), widths of gleaming azure and white satin drape together, a diptych of clouds and sea. The hot, saturated hues of Pimiento III (1976) and Mirage (1976) attest to more exotic influences; while Coin (1976) incorporates found tin cans, stripped of their labels, gleaming mysteriously inside a gauze bag that sags under their weight.--Gagosian website.
Alternative Title
Jammers
Subject
Genre/Form
Exhibition catalogs.
Note
  • Essays by Alexander Keefe and David Anfam.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references.
Contents
Photographs of Rauschenberg's trip to Ahmedabad, India, 1975.
ISBN
  • 9781935263746
  • 1935263749
LCCN
2014466678
OCLC
  • ocn843858396
  • 843858396
  • SCSB-1750141
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library