@article{ART001778430},
author={Cho, Soojin},
title={The Idea of “Body in Motion” in the Works of Rauschenberg and Morris: The Collaboration between American Art and Dance in the 1960s},
journal={Journal of History of Modern Art},
issn={1598-7728},
year={2013},
number={33},
pages={77-108},
doi={10.17057/kahoma.2013..33.004}
TY - JOUR
AU - Cho, Soojin
TI - The Idea of “Body in Motion” in the Works of Rauschenberg and Morris: The Collaboration between American Art and Dance in the 1960s
JO - Journal of History of Modern Art
PY - 2013
VL - null
IS - 33
PB - 현대미술사학회
SP - 77
EP - 108
SN - 1598-7728
AB - Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008) and Robert Morris (1931- ) was and is the American artists who made major contributions to the development respectively of Neo-Dada and Minimalism. A unique common denominator is detected in the early artistic careers of the two artists: Both creative minds were closely related to the postmodern development of dance of the time for about a decade. In the second half of the 1950s, the American art scene witnessed the revival of the element of the body, which was considered to belong to the realm of everyday life. This was part of the 'anti-art' reaction against the formalist attitude of modernist art, which was mainly and plausibly associated with Abstract Expressionism. Based on the belief that the collaboration between Rauschenberg and Morris and the postmodernists in the area of dance was in the core of this phenomenon, this article aims to look into the modes and properties of body movement, which is one of the seminal elements of dance.
In New York around the 1960s a new tendency called 'Gesamtkunstwerk (all-embracing art form or total artwork)' emerged to challenge the hegemony of modernist art, and among the proponents of this movement were artists of various disciplines such as music, dance and visual art. A good example of this would be
(1952), a proto-happening piece shown at Black Mountain College. After this work that embodied the conjunction of 'dance as movement' in which everyday life was represented, 'music as sound' and 'art as surroundings,' the practice to combine art and dance was rapidly accelerated: many artists including Rauschenberg and Morris unfolded their creative capacity in the fields of set and prop design, fashion design, choreography and dance.
Rauschenberg became a member of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company in 1954 and until 1977 he utilized his creativity in the designing of sets, props and costumes for 23 dance pieces in total. He materialized his artistic convictions through the so-called 'artworks as set designs': the sets for (1954), which were prototypes for his 'Combines'; the dotted backdrop and costumes for (1958) in which the relationship between man and its environment was delved into. Moreover, in (1963) and (1964) Rauschenberg performed in person while introducing his notion of 'live set'. Soon after that, he choreographed dance works including
Cho, Soojin. (2013). The Idea of “Body in Motion” in the Works of Rauschenberg and Morris: The Collaboration between American Art and Dance in the 1960s. Journal of History of Modern Art, 33, 77-108.
Cho, Soojin. 2013, "The Idea of “Body in Motion” in the Works of Rauschenberg and Morris: The Collaboration between American Art and Dance in the 1960s", Journal of History of Modern Art, no.33, pp.77-108. Available from: doi:10.17057/kahoma.2013..33.004
Cho, Soojin "The Idea of “Body in Motion” in the Works of Rauschenberg and Morris: The Collaboration between American Art and Dance in the 1960s" Journal of History of Modern Art 33 pp.77-108 (2013) : 77.
Cho, Soojin. The Idea of “Body in Motion” in the Works of Rauschenberg and Morris: The Collaboration between American Art and Dance in the 1960s. 2013; 33 : 77-108. Available from: doi:10.17057/kahoma.2013..33.004
Cho, Soojin. "The Idea of “Body in Motion” in the Works of Rauschenberg and Morris: The Collaboration between American Art and Dance in the 1960s" Journal of History of Modern Art no.33(2013) : 77-108.doi: 10.17057/kahoma.2013..33.004
Cho, Soojin. The Idea of “Body in Motion” in the Works of Rauschenberg and Morris: The Collaboration between American Art and Dance in the 1960s. Journal of History of Modern Art, 33, 77-108. doi: 10.17057/kahoma.2013..33.004
Cho, Soojin. The Idea of “Body in Motion” in the Works of Rauschenberg and Morris: The Collaboration between American Art and Dance in the 1960s. Journal of History of Modern Art. 2013; 33 77-108. doi: 10.17057/kahoma.2013..33.004
Cho, Soojin. The Idea of “Body in Motion” in the Works of Rauschenberg and Morris: The Collaboration between American Art and Dance in the 1960s. 2013; 33 : 77-108. Available from: doi:10.17057/kahoma.2013..33.004
Cho, Soojin. "The Idea of “Body in Motion” in the Works of Rauschenberg and Morris: The Collaboration between American Art and Dance in the 1960s" Journal of History of Modern Art no.33(2013) : 77-108.doi: 10.17057/kahoma.2013..33.004