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Grand Rapids Art Museum
Grand Rapids Art Museum

Grand Rapids, MI

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Detail of L.A. Uncovered #12, 1998
Exhibition: Rauschenberg at Gemini
Robert Rauschenberg
American, 1925-2008
Detail of L.A. Uncovered #12, 1998
Mixed Media, 41 x 30 1/2"
Estate of Robert Rauschenberg and Gemini G.E.L./Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY
Grand Rapids Art Museum
101 Monroe Center
Grand Rapids, MI 49503
616-831-1000
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www.artmuseumgr.org

Hours:
Tuesday – Thursday 10 am – 5 pm
Friday 10 am – 9 pm
Saturday 10 am – 5 pm
Sunday 12 noon – 5 pm
Closed Mondays

Fees:

GRAM Members – Free
Adults - $8.00
Senior Adults & College Students(W ID) - $7.00
Youth (ages 6-17) - $5.00
Children under 6 – Free

Directions:
From I-196:

  • From I-196 East or West, take the downtown exit 77C, onto Ottawa Avenue. Take Ottawa Avenue South three lights to Pearl Street. Turn right on Pearl Street, then left onto Monroe Center. The Grand Rapids Art Museum is located at 101 Monroe Center between Monroe and Ottawa.

From 131:

  • Take 131 North or South to the Pearl Street exit (85B). Head East towards the Grand River. Cross the Grand River and turn right on Monroe Center. The Grand Rapids Art Museum is located at 101 Monroe Center between Monroe and Ottawa.

Parking:
The most convenient parking is located across Ottawa Street from the Museum, in the Monroe Center parking ramp. From Ottawa Street, turn left on Louis Street, and left again onto Ionia Street. The public entrance to the Monroe Center parking ramp is located off Ionia Street. The city of Grand Rapids offers one hour free parking in the Monroe Center ramp.

The Grand Rapids Art Museum has three (3) non-motorized wheelchairs and one (1) motorized scooter available. In addition, there is an elevator that may be used to access the galleries on each floor as needed.

Mission:
The mission of the Grand Rapids Art Museum is to provide a gathering place where people of all ages and backgrounds can enrich their lives through interaction with authentic works of art of the finest quality in a thought-provoking and creative way. In order to nourish and delight the mind and spirit, the Museum collects, conserves, educates, and interprets.

History and other information:
Visit the Grand Rapids Art Museum and find what the Chicago Tribune calls one of the “art treasures in nearby Midwest cities.” The Art Museum presents exhibitions of national caliber and regional distinction. The collection spans Renaissance to Modern Art, with particular strength in European and American 19th and 20th century painting and sculpture. The Works on Paper Study includes more than 3,500 prints, drawings, and photographs. During Friday Nights at GRAM, the museum stays open until 9 pm and features an immersion in the arts with great music, cash bar, and art forum lectures and performances.


Exhibitions:

Rauschenberg in Context

Rauschenberg at Gemini

Robert Rauschenberg: Synapsis Shuffle

Events


Grand Rapids Art Museum (GRAM) will host three distinct exhibitions celebrating the work of American artist Robert Rauschenberg, beginning this February, providing a rich introduction to the defining aspects of Rauschenberg's art.

Rauschenberg in Context and Rauschenberg at Gemini
February 3 – May 20, 2012.

Robert Rauschenberg: Synapsis Shuffle
March 3 - May 20, 2012.

Robert Rauschenberg
Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008) was one of the most important American artists of the twentieth century. He worked in a broad range of media as a painter, sculptor, printmaker, draftsman (drawing), photographer, performance artist, choreographer, and theater designer.

In each of these media, Rauschenberg made innovative use of materials that led to radical new formats—the early "combines," mixing painting and ordinary objects like a chair, radio, or taxidermied goat; the silkscreen paintings with their transfer of photographic imagery to the canvas; and, the use of electronics and other means to create participatory works of art that prompt audience interaction.

A chronicler of contemporary life, particularly the American experience, Rauschenberg's great themes were the city, technology, multiculturalism, and the environment. The provocative and poetic collisions of images, things, and ideas in Rauschenberg's art are layered with personal reflections on the social, political, and cultural currents of our time.


Rauschenberg in Context
February 3 – May 20, 2012
This exhibition displays works by other, related artists to examine where Rauschenberg fits within the history of twentieth-century American art.

Rauschenberg came of age as an artist during the late 1940s and 1950s, during the development of Abstract Expressionism in New York City. Works by artist Robert Motherwell and others are presented that exemplify this period and its style, incorporating the personal and spontaneous gesture of the brush.

View works that incorporate the Dada and Surrealism roots of chance and accident—a strong influence on Rauschenberg's work. View a work of art by Marcel Duchamp, known for utilizing found objects, of which were later very important to Rauschenberg's art.

In his use of personal gesture, chance, accident, and the found object, Rauschenberg expands upon precedents set by other artists. In Rauschenberg's incorporation and celebration of the commonplace and popular culture, he parallels the early art of Jasper Johns and anticipates in the late 1950s and early 1960s the advent of Pop art.


Rauschenberg at Gemini
February 3 – May 20, 2012
View works from Rauschenberg's printmaking career, which began in the early 1960s and continued into the early twenty-first century. Many of his prints were produced at Gemini G.E.L., the world-famous publishing workshop of prints and multiples in Los Angeles, California.

Rauschenberg's prints pushed the boundaries of what printmaking could be. By collaborating with Gemini's printers over a 30-year period, he produced more than 250 editioned works of art that deviated from typical prints in scale, by incorporating unconventional materials such as textiles and light, and by changing how the viewer could interact with the resulting work of art.

Many of Rauschenberg's most famous prints, print series, and multiples are included in this exhibition. View the Stoned Moon Series, which documents the American space program leading to the Apollo 11 mission; the Tibetan Keys and Locks, Samarkand Stitches, and Marrakech series, which demonstrate the artist's commitment to multiculturalism and international cooperation; and the famous limited edition lithograph and poster that announced the first Earth Day in 1970.


Robert Rauschenberg: Synapsis Shuffle
March 3 – May 20, 2012
Synapsis Shuffle has been exhibited in only two other cities in the world—New York and Paris—before arriving in Grand Rapids.

This exhibition consists of 52 large-scale panels, and is a monumental participatory work that incorporates chance and performance, hallmarks of Rauschenberg's art. Each of the 52 panels is a collage of images taken from photographs the artist took during his global travels. The title of the work and the number of paintings refer to a deck of cards, a clever signal of the work's installation method: each time the panels of Synapsis Shuffle are presented, they are meant to be "shuffled" by event participants, in displays of no more than seven and no fewer than three.

GRAM will organize a Grand Rapids event and "deal out a hand" to the event participants, where the panels will be shuffled into a unique exhibition. The event will be filmed and available for viewing after the event. The Synapsis Shuffle exhibition will continue through May 20, 2012.

Throughout the course of the exhibitions, guests can enhance their experience by attending diverse weekly programming focusing on Rauschenberg. From lectures, films, drop-in Docent-led tours, gallery talks, and a special Merce Cunningham-inspired dance performance, there are a variety of ways to engage with Rauschenberg's works and learn more about this innovative American artist.


Rauschenberg programming (Includes Friday Nights at GRAM and weekly Saturday Series):

FRIDAY NIGHTS AT GRAM – Conversations

Feb 03 Film: Fully Awake: Black Mountain College (2007), 7:00 pm
Feb 24 Rauschenberg Revisited: Gallery Talk with artist Richard App, 7:00 pm

Mar 02 Film: Rauschenberg Synapsis Shuffle, New York, 7:00 pm
Mar 23 Rauschenberg Revisited: Gallery Talk with artist Katherine Sullivan, 7:00 pm
Mar 30 Merce Cunningham-Inspired Dance Presentation with Amy Wilson, 7:00 pm

Apr 27 Rauschenberg Revisited: Gallery Talk with artist Matt Zacharias, 7:00 pm

May 04 Photography Workshop & Collage Activity, 7:00 pm
May 11 Rauschenberg Shuffle Activity, 7:00 pm
May 18 Film: Robert Rauschenberg Retrospective (1979), 7:00 pm

THE SATURDAY SERIES: LECTURES, FILMS, TALKS & TOURS

Feb 04 Tour: Docent-led tour of exhibition, 2:00 pm
Feb 11 Tour: Docent-led tour of exhibition, 2:00 pm
Feb 18 Film: Robert Rauschenberg Retrospective (1979), 2:00 pm
Feb 25 Lecture: Kirsten Strom, "Robert Rauschenberg: Herald of Postmodernism, 2:00pm

Mar 03 Gallery Talk: Dana Friis-Hansen, Director and CEO, 2:00 pm
Mar 10 Tour: Docent-led tour of exhibition, 2:00 pm
Mar 17 Film: Fully Awake: Black Mountain College (2007), 2:00 pm
Mar 24 Lecture: Henry Luttikhuizen, "Mindful Ramblings: The Art of Robert Rauschenberg," 2:00 pm
Mar 31 Film: Who Gets to Call It Art? (2006), 2:00 pm

Apr 07 Film: Fully Awake: Black Mountain College (2007), 2:00 pm
Apr 14 Tour: Docent-led tour of the exhibition, 2:00 pm
Apr 21 Lecture: Thomas Post, "Rauschenberg: Paintings, Parallels & Re-presentations," 2:00 pm
Apr 28 Film: Who Gets to Call it Art? (2006), 2:00 pm

May 05 Museum closed for annual fundraising event
May 11 Rauschenberg Shuffle Activity, 7:00 pm
May 12 Tour: Docent-led tour of the exhibition, 2:00 pm
May 19 Tour: Docent-led tour of the exhibition, 2:00 pm

In addition to the above programming, the Education Center Studio also features art-making activities for families inspired by the work of Robert Rauschenberg. February’s theme is Think In Ink, a colorful screenprinting project.

Rauschenberg in Context is organized by the Grand Rapids Art Museum

Rauschenberg at Gemini was organized by the Armory Center for the Arts, Pasadena, CA. Exhibition tour management by Landau Traveling Exhibitions, Los Angeles, CA. Made possible by Steelcase, Inc., KINSHIP Foundation, J.C. Huizenga, The Louis and Helen Padnos Foundation, Miner S. and Mary Ann Keeler, BDO, Glen Johnson and Tom Merchant, Bill Scarbrough and Kate Kesteloot Scarbrough, Amway Hotel Corporation. Media sponsor: Michigan Radio 104.1

Robert Rauschenberg: Synpasis Shuffle. This exhibition was organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. The Grand Rapids presentation has been made possible by Presenting Sponsor Daniel & Pamella DeVos Foundation.


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