Robert Rauschenberg - New Now: Modern & Contemporary Art New York Wednesday, September 25, 2024 | Phillips
  • “I put my trust in the materials that confront me, because they put me in touch with the unknown.” —Robert Rauschenberg

    In Wagon Wheel (Galvanic Suite), executed in 1989, Rauschenberg makes a defiant return to silkscreen – a medium he had overlooked since the 1960s. Compelling in its materiality and esoteric in its subject matter, the present work is a testament to the artist’s career-long dedication to blurring the distinction between the artist’s hand and the mechanically produced image.

     

    Wagon Wheel (Galvanic Suite) centers on a curious photograph of a wooden structure, posited in an outdoor setting, and framed by overgrown trees. Stark brushstrokes atop the photograph create an illusion of clouds in the sky, while a strip of empty steel along the right vertical edge of the work flattens the composition, reminding the viewer of the two dimensionality of the aluminum medium. The name “Leo”, written in mirror along the bottom, perhaps references gallerist Leo Castelli – an advocate and friend of the artist. A tarp hangs down from the wooden slats of the wooden construction, anchored at three points. Mounted at the center is a rubber tire – while not quite a wagon wheel, one assumes this to be the namesake of the painting.

     

    The artist originally began creating silkscreen paintings after visiting Andy Warhol’s studio and seeing Warhol’s experimentation with the process. Thus began an extended series of ‘Silkscreen Paintings’ executed between 1962 and 1964, combining silkscreened photographic images with colorful, gestural passages of paint. The present work, however, comes from a suite of works that, while the artist also considered paintings, were printed onto galvanized steel. The works in this ‘Galvanic Suite’ were executed quite late in the artist’s career – between 1988 and 1991 – and often incorporated bright shades of paint which were exuberantly applied to the surface. Wagon Wheel (Galvanic Suite), in contrast, is rendered purely in greyscale – serving to, intentionally or unintentionally, maintain the nostalgic, hazy quality of the work.

    “I think a picture is more like the real world when it is made out of the real world.”
    —Robert Rauschenberg
    The works in the Galvanic Suite primarily referenced Rauschenberg’s black-and-white photographs, rather than appropriated images from magazines and newspapers that inspired his Silkscreen Paintings. While it is not readily evident where the photo in Wagon Wheel (Galvanic Suite) was taken, or what it depicts, the use of the tire in the present work draws upon the artist’s fascination with the wheel throughout his oeuvre. Emerging in the artist’s visual lexicon in his 1952 photographs of Roman flea markets, wheels would take on dozens of incarnations throughout Rauschenberg’s lifetime. The symbolic meaning of Rauschenberg’s tires has been interpreted as references to motion, speed, orifices, modernity, Americanism, and cycles of life and death. Perhaps most infamous of all is the use of the tire in his 1955-59 work, Monogram, in which a tire encircles the head of a stuffed Angora goat. 

     

    Rauschenberg is of course not the first artist to be fascinated by wheels; Marcel Duchamp’s 1913 Bicycle Wheel comes to mind. Speaking of the readymade’s calming effects, Duchamp once said “To see that wheel turning was very soothing, very comforting, a sort of opening of avenues on other things than material life of every day . . . I enjoyed looking at it, just as I enjoyed looking at the flames dancing in a fireplace.”i Perhaps for Rauschenberg, the humble wheel or tire served a similar purpose; at once a simple object to gaze upon, and simultaneously a semiotic tool, detached from its function.

     

    i “Marcel Duchamp, Bicycle Wheel,” Museum of Modern Art, accessed September 2, 2024, online.

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    • Description

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    • Provenance

      Private Collection
      Acquired from the above by the present owner

    • Exhibited

      Stockholm, Heland Wetterling Gallery, Robert Rauschenberg: Paintings 1989, September 5–October 8, 1989, p. 7 (illustrated)

41

Wagon Wheel from the Galvanic Suite

signed and dated "Rauschenberg 89" lower right
acrylic, enamel, and transfer print on galvanized aluminum in artist's frame
48 7/8 x 36 3/4 in. (124.1 x 93.3 cm)
Executed in 1989.

Full Cataloguing

Estimate
$70,000 - 100,000 

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New Now: Modern & Contemporary Art

New York Auction 25 September 2024