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Seeing the Unseen Erased de Kooning Drawing is an artwork that
radically challenged the very definition of art and questioned the
notion of the artist as creator. Three American artists were
involved in its creation: In 1953, Robert Rauschenberg erased a
drawing by Willem de Kooning, who had somewhat reluctantly been
giving his consent. Jasper Johns created a label for its first
public presentation that proved to be key to the psychological
framing of the piece. Having been transmuted into something new,
the obliterated drawing was soon perceived as a pivotal moment in
art history: In the 1950s it was considered Neo-Dada, in the 1960s
it was hailed as the beginning of conceptual art, and in the 1980s
saw it as a departure into postmodernism. Numerous artists
referenced the work and it became a touchstone in Rauschenberg’s
oeuvre. Gregor Stemmrich outlines its status as a litmus test for
the definitions of modernism, literalism and postmodernism, and
demonstrates its continuing relevance for the theory of the image
and the question of appropriation.
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Hearing (Paperback)
Robert Morris, Gregor Stemmrich; Edited by Gregor Stemmrich
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R750
Discovery Miles 7 500
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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