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  1. The most famous series of "found objects" were Duchamp's "readymades", an early form of junk art, including works like: Bicycle Wheel (1913), Bottle-Rack (1914), and Fountain (1917, a urinal) both in the Musee National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; and In Advance of the Broken Arm (1915, Replica in Moderna Museet, Stockholm; a regular snow shovel on which Duchamp had painted ...

  2. 12 de mai. de 2008 · Erased de Kooning Drawing. In the early 1950s, Rauschenberg explored the boundaries and the definition of art, following from the radical modernist precedent set by Marcel Duchamp's earlier Dada readymades. In this "drawing," he set out to discover if erasure, or the removal of a mark, constituted a work of art.

  3. 20 de abr. de 2014 · A 16th-century Wunderkammer. The amassment and display of found objects for their aesthetic qualities dates back to at least the 16th century, when the collections of individual enthusiasts were displayed in private "cabinets of curiosities," or what the Germans called " Wunderkammer ." But it wasn't until the 1900s that artists began to ...

  4. Louise Nevelson emerged in the art world amidst the dominance of the Abstract Expressionist movement. In her most iconic works, she utilized wooden objects that she gathered from urban debris piles to create her monumental installations - a process clearly influenced by the precedent of Marcel Duchamp's found object sculptures and readymades ...

  5. 17 de ago. de 2023 · A pioneer of assemblage art in the 1930s and 1950s Joseph Cornell was one of the most famous American assemblage artists of the modern decade. Cornell was most famous for incorporating found objects such as photographs, shells, maps, magazine cut-outs, and other interesting unique objects into little boxes that he created as poetic devices.

  6. Associated art terms include Combine, Found object, Painting, and Sculpture. Read the interview with Rauschenberg from the Museum’s Oral History Program. Visit the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation website. Visit SFMOMA’s Rauschenberg Research Project. Read a short essay about Robert Rauschenberg at the post website

  7. Summary of Marcel Duchamp. Few artists can boast of having changed the course of art history in the way that Marcel Duchamp did. By challenging the very notion of what is art, his first readymades sent shock waves across the art world that can still be felt today. Duchamp's ongoing preoccupation with the mechanisms of desire and human sexuality ...