The Robert Rauschenberg Foundation has sold the artist's Captiva Island, Florida, property to South Seas, a resort, to the ...
When Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008) enrolled at Black Mountain College, in 1948, ravenous to learn everything he could about ...
Robert Rauschenberg’s 32-foot-long (~9.7-meter-long) silkscreen painting “Barge” (1962–63) will be among over a dozen works exhibited at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in Manhattan this fall, part ...
The Captiva Island Fire Control District’s commission provided direction on its search for possible island property for the expansion or improvement of the district’s services at it recent meeting. On ...
Captiva resort South Seas bought the 22-acre property once owned by art icon Robert Rauschenberg. Here's what they paid for ...
“I think a painting has such a limited life,” Robert Rauschenberg told an interviewer in 1965, a year after he won the Grand Prize for Painting at the Venice Biennale and became one of the most famous ...
The concept of destroying, or altering, a famous work of art was an approach Rauschenberg himself employed and explored with his 1953 Erased de Kooning Drawing. Rauschenberg, a Pop artist, frequently ...
The proceeds of artist Nikolas Bentel's "erased" Rauschenberg work will go to charity. Nikolas Bentel, The Erased Rauschenberg. The artist destroyed Robert Rauschenberg's Untitled (1973). Courtesy of ...
Historically, Rauschenberg got us from Abstract Expressionism to Pop Art—one of the greatest stylistic leaps ever—by introducing those bits of the readymade and the already-seen into the meaty ...
Robert Rauschenberg liked to smash molds. In the 1950s, at the apex of the Abstract Expressionist movement, the artist employed his off-the-wall imagination in service of a multimedia approach to art ...
Robert Rauschenberg, whose use of odd and everyday articles earned him a reputation as a pioneer in pop art but whose talents spanned the worlds of painting, sculpture and dance, has died. By The ...