Pace is pleased to present Robert Rauschenberg: Channel Surfing, an exhibition of more than 30 works by the renowned American artist at 540 West 25th Street in New York. Running from September 10 to October 23, 2021, the presentation focuses on Rauschenberg's response to the rise of global media culture from the early 1980s to the mid-2000s. Spotlighting Rauschenberg's return to painting after a decade-long hiatus from the medium, this exhibition examines the artist's development of a radical new approach to his canvases that combined elements of photography, printmaking, and sculpture. Robert Rauschenberg: Channel Surfing traces the artist's creation of a visual language that addresses fundamental transformations in media culture in the late 20th-century, a period marked by the apotheosis of television and the emergence of the internet.
Focusing on the final decades of Rauschenberg's longtime explorations of the reach and power of technology, the exhibition showcases the artist's reinvention and reimagining of his early artistic investigations of the 1960s. It also highlights Rauschenberg's turn toward using his own visual archive of photographs and prints as material for his later works, a shift from his earlier use of appropriated imagery. A selection of major and rarely seen works from private and public collections will be on view in the show, including works from the series 'Salvage' (1983–1985), 'Shiners' (1986–1993), 'Copperheads' (1985/1989), 'Gluts' (1986–1995), 'Urban Bourbons' (1988–1986), 'Anagrams' (1995–1997), 'Arcadian Retreats' (1996), 'Anagrams (A Pun)' (1997–2002), 'Apogamy Pods' (1999–2000), 'Short Stories' (2000–2002), 'Scenarios' (2002–2006), and 'Runts' (2006–2008).
Spanning three decades of Rauschenberg's expansive and deeply influential practice, Channel Surfing offers a focused survey of the later years of the artist's career. Anchoring the presentation is the large-scale painting Colonnade (1984), a key work from the artist's 'Salvage' series. In that series, Rauschenberg explored the possibilities of repurposing imagery from his own past, setting into motion much of the work that would follow. Monumental and bold, Colonnade exemplifies his interest in forging visual circuits between history and the present.
A presentation of photographs by Rauschenberg on view in the gallery's library builds on these connections between the artist's paintings and photography late in his career. Included in this showing are three works from the artist's Photem Series I, photo collages mounted on aluminium and produced in the early 1990s, and a group of digital prints created in the same period.
Rauschenberg's engagement with globalisation is a recurring theme throughout the exhibition. In the mid-1980s, the artist presented the international travelling exhibition Rauschenberg Overseas Cultural Initiative (ROCI), through which he advocated for art's power to enact meaningful social change and cultivate exchange across borders. In the following years, he began using his practice to address connections between the forces of globalization and the threat of environmental destruction. On view in this exhibition are five major sculptures from his 'Gluts' series, which the artist created after a trip to Texas amid an economic crisis precipitated by an excess of supply in the oil market. Included in this group of sculptures, which incorporate found objects and signage, is the celebrated work Primary Mobiloid Glut (1988), on loan to Pace from the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.
Rauschenberg's late paintings are distinguished in part by the use of nontraditional supports, including copper, aluminium, galvanised steel, and, eventually, polylaminate. The exhibition draws connections between his use of these materials and the metal of the 'Gluts' sculptures, linking the formal characteristics of the artist's earlier works with ongoing issues related to globalization and climate. The reflective surfaces of these late paintings also serve a participatory function, bringing viewers into the works as active contributors and emphasising art's potential impact on individuals and global systems alike.
Another highlight in the exhibition is a selection of the artist's 'Apogamy Pods' (1999–2000), which will be presented on the gallery's seventh floor. These enigmatic works, for which Rauschenberg transferred inkjet pigment images onto polylaminate supports, contain a remarkable degree of white space. With these works, Rauschenberg challenged viewers to imagine new ways of life and alternative futures.
Robert Rauschenberg (b. 1925, Port Arthur, Texas; d. 2008, Captiva, Florida) captured the experimental spirit of postwarart with his constantly innovative practice, bringing traces of reality into his work while blurring distinctions between media. Although he eschewed defining affiliations, his interdisciplinary practice positioned him as a forerunner of nearly every artistic movement following Abstract Expressionism. Rauschenberg's celebrated 'Combines' (1954–1964) juxtapose disparate media with found objects and imagery, encompassing a space between painting, photography, collage, printmaking, sculpture, and performance. Developing his philosophy that painting relates to both art and life, Rauschenberg further investigated this dialogue through collaborations with artists, musicians, choreographers, performers, and writers.
Press release courtesy Pace Gallery.
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