Subasta 1
Printing the Pop: Prints and Posters Auction
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Miércoles, 17.12.25, 18:00
Tarragona, España
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(Printing the Pop) recorre una trayectoria, mostrando cómo lo ordinario se transformó en icónico a través de las obras de artistas revolucionarios. Esto es más que una subasta: es una celebración de los mayores logros del Pop Art y una oportunidad única para asegurar una pieza documentada de la historia del arte para su propia colección. Tenemos el honor de presentar esta extraordinaria colección de prints y pósteres, cuidadosamente seleccionada durante más de cuatro décadas por uno de los coleccionistas más dedicados del sector, José Luis Rupérez.
Para asistir a esta subasta en vivo o dejar preofertas debe -
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LOTE 36:
Robert Rauschenberg (American, 1925–2008)
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Precio inicial:
€
1 000
Precio estimado :
€800 - €1 080
Comisión de la casa de subasta: 15%
IVA: 21%
IVA sólo en comisión
Documentos:
Descripción general del artículo
Descripción:
Eath day
In response to a massive oil spill off the coast of Southern California in 1969, Wisconsin Senator Gaylord Nelson initiated the idea of the first annual Earth Day on April 22, 1970. Soliciting support from Democratic and Republican leaders, Earth Day was conceived as a “national teach-in” to bring public awareness to the threat of global air and water pollution. What began as a grass-roots movement, with twenty million Americans participating, is now recognized as the launch of the environmental movement and observed in nearly 200 countries around the world. Robert Rauschenberg designed the first Earth Day poster to benefit the American Environment Foundation in Washington, D.C., and it was published in an edition of 10,300 by Castelli Graphics, New York. Using the bald eagle as the dominant image, the artist symbolically placed the United States at the center of a global problem. Muted and muddy tones depicting environmental decay surround the national bird: polluted cities, contaminated waters, junkyards littered with debris, landscapes scarred by highways and deforestation, and the gorilla, another endangered animal. The safekeeping of the environment and the notion of individual responsibility for the welfare of life on earth was a longstanding concern of Rauschenberg, and this notion would inform his art and activism throughout his life. The poster designed for the inaugural Earth Day was one of many he would create to raise funds for the myriad social causes that were important to him. / 82.7 x 64.2
Offset litográfico
Con más de 10 años de experiencia en el mercado del arte español y americano, T he Art Market Dealers selecciona cuidadosamente obras de arte de excelente procedencia (directamente de artistas, galeristas o coleccionistas) y organiza subastas de arte con piezas muy escogidas, verificadas, y comisiones únicamente del 18%. The Art Market Dealers ofrece las mejores condiciones para compradores y cedentes. Conócenos en www.theartmarket.es
In response to a massive oil spill off the coast of Southern California in 1969, Wisconsin Senator Gaylord Nelson initiated the idea of the first annual Earth Day on April 22, 1970. Soliciting support from Democratic and Republican leaders, Earth Day was conceived as a “national teach-in” to bring public awareness to the threat of global air and water pollution. What began as a grass-roots movement, with twenty million Americans participating, is now recognized as the launch of the environmental movement and observed in nearly 200 countries around the world. Robert Rauschenberg designed the first Earth Day poster to benefit the American Environment Foundation in Washington, D.C., and it was published in an edition of 10,300 by Castelli Graphics, New York. Using the bald eagle as the dominant image, the artist symbolically placed the United States at the center of a global problem. Muted and muddy tones depicting environmental decay surround the national bird: polluted cities, contaminated waters, junkyards littered with debris, landscapes scarred by highways and deforestation, and the gorilla, another endangered animal. The safekeeping of the environment and the notion of individual responsibility for the welfare of life on earth was a longstanding concern of Rauschenberg, and this notion would inform his art and activism throughout his life. The poster designed for the inaugural Earth Day was one of many he would create to raise funds for the myriad social causes that were important to him. / 82.7 x 64.2
Offset litográfico
Con más de 10 años de experiencia en el mercado del arte español y americano, T he Art Market Dealers selecciona cuidadosamente obras de arte de excelente procedencia (directamente de artistas, galeristas o coleccionistas) y organiza subastas de arte con piezas muy escogidas, verificadas, y comisiones únicamente del 18%. The Art Market Dealers ofrece las mejores condiciones para compradores y cedentes. Conócenos en www.theartmarket.es