Assemblage (art)
Assemblage is an artistic form or medium usually created on a defined substrate that consists of three-dimensional elements projecting out of or from the substrate. It is similar to collage, a two-dimensional medium. It is part of the visual arts, and it typically uses found objects, but is not limited to these materials.
History
The origin of the art form dates to the cubist constructions of Pablo Picasso c. 1912–1914. The origin of the word can be traced back to the early 1950s, when Jean Dubuffet created a series of collages of butterfly wings, which he titled assemblages d'empreintes. However, Marcel Duchamp, Pablo Picasso and others had been working with found objects for many years prior to Dubuffet. Russian artist Vladimir Tatlin created his "counter-reliefs" in the mid 1910s. Alongside Tatlin, the earliest woman artist to try her hand at assemblage was Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven, the Dada Baroness. In Paris in the 1920s Alexander Calder, Jose De Creeft, Picasso and others began making fully 3-dimensional works from metal scraps, found metal objects and wire. In the U.S., one of the earliest and most prolific assemblage artists was Louise Nevelson, who began creating her sculptures from found pieces of wood in the late 1930s.In the 1950s and 60s assemblage started to become more widely known and used. Artists like Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns started using scrappy materials and objects to make anti-aesthetic art sculptures, a big part of the ideas that make assemblage what it is.
The painter Armando Reverón is one of the first to use this technique when using disposable materials such as bamboo, wires, or kraft paper. In the thirties he made a skeleton with wings of mucilage, adopting this style years before other artists. Later, Reverón made instruments and set pieces such as a telephone, a sofa, a sewing machine, a piano and even music books with their scores.
In 1961, the exhibition "The Art of Assemblage" was featured at the New York Museum of Modern Art. The exhibition showcased the work of early 20th-century European artists such as Braque, Dubuffet, Marcel Duchamp, Picasso, and Kurt Schwitters alongside Americans Man Ray, Joseph Cornell, Robert Mallary and Robert Rauschenberg, and also included less well known American West Coast assemblage artists such as George Herms, Bruce Conner and Edward Kienholz. William C Seitz, the curator of the exhibition, described assemblages as being made up of preformed natural or manufactured materials, objects, or fragments not intended as art materials.
Artists primarily known for assemblage
- Arman, French artist, sculptor and painter.
- Hans Bellmer, a German artist known for his life-sized female dolls, produced in the 1930s.
- Wallace Berman, an American artist known for his verifax collages.
- André Breton, a French artist, regarded as a principal founder of Surrealism.
- John Chamberlain , a Chicago artist known for his sculptures of welded pieces of wrecked automobiles.
- Greg Colson , an American artist known for his wall sculptures of stick maps, constructed paintings, solar systems, directionals, and intersections.
- Joseph Cornell, Cornell, who lived in New York City, is known for his delicate boxes, usually glass-fronted, in which he arranged surprising collections of objects, images of renaissance paintings and old photographs. Many of his boxes, such as the famous Medici Slot Machine boxes, are interactive and are meant to be handled.
- Rosalie Gascoigne, a New Zealand-born Australian sculptor.
- Raoul Hausmann, an Austrian artist and writer and a key figure in Berlin Dada, his most famous work is the assemblage Der Geist Unserer Zeit – Mechanischer Kopf , c. 1920.
- Romuald Hazoumé, a contemporary artist from the Republic of Bénin, who exhibits widely in Europe and the U.K.
- George Herms , an American artist known for his assemblages, works on papers, and theater pieces.
- Louis Hirshman, a Philadelphia artist known for his use of 3D materials on flat substrates for caricatures of the famous, as well as for collages and assemblages of everyday life, archetypes and surreal scenes.
- Robert H. Hudson, an American artist.
- Irma Hünerfauth, a German artist, known for her combine paintings, collages and assemblages, scrap sculptures, machines and kinetic art from found objects.
- Jasper Johns, an American Pop artist, painter, printmaker and sculptor.
- Edward Kienholz, an American artist who collaborated with his wife, Nancy Reddin Kienholz, creating free-standing, large-scale "tableaux" or scenes of modern life such as the Beanery, complete with models of persons, made of discarded objects.
- Lubo Kristek, a Czech artist known for his critical assemblages of bones, traps, material cast out by the sea, waste and mobile phones.
- Jean-Jacques Lebel, in 1994 installed a large assemblage entitled Monument à Félix Guattari in the Forum of the Centre Pompidou.
- Janice Lowry, American artist known for biographical art in the form of assemblage, artist books, and journals, which combined found objects and materials with writings and sketches.
- Ondrej Mares, a Czech-Australian artist and sculptor best known for his 'Kachina' figures – a series of works.
- Markus Meurer, a German artist, known for his sculptures from found objects
- Louise Nevelson, an American artist, known for her abstract expressionist "boxes" grouped together to form a new creation. She used found objects or everyday discarded things in her "assemblages" or assemblies, one of which was three stories high.
- Minoru Ohira, a Japanese-born artist.
- Meret Oppenheim, a German-born Swiss artist, identified with the Surrealist movement.
- Wolfgang Paalen, an Austrian-German-Mexican surrealist artist and theorist, founder of the magazine DYN and known for several assembled objects, f.e. Nuage articulé
- Noah Purifoy, an African-American visual artist and sculptor, co-founder of the Watts Towers Art Center, and creator of the Noah Purifoy Outdoor Desert Art Museum. He is best known for his assemblage sculpture, including a body of work made from charred debris and wreckage collected after the Watts Riots of August 1965.
- Robert Rauschenberg, painter and collagist known for his mixed media works during six decades.
- Fred H. Roster, an American sculptor.
- Betye Saar, American visual artist primarily known for her assemblages with family memorabilia, stereotyped African American figures from folk culture and advertising, mystical amulets and charms, and ritual and tribal objects.
- Alexis Smith is an American artist best known for assemblages and installations.
- Daniel Spoerri, a Swiss artist, known for his "snare pictures" in which he captures a group of objects, such as the remains of meals eaten by individuals, including the plates, silverware and glasses, all of which are fixed to the table or board, which is then displayed on a wall.
- Vladimir Tatlin, a Russian artist known for his counter-reliefs—structures made of wood and iron for hanging in wall corners in the 1910s.
- Wolf Vostell, known for his use of concrete in his work. In his environments video installations and paintings he used television sets and concrete as well as telephones real cars and pieces of cars.
- Gordon Wagner, was a pioneer in American assemblage art, who was known for his bazaar art, painting, poetry and writing.
- Jeff Wassmann, an American-born contemporary artist who works in Australia under the nom de plume of the pioneering German modernist Johann Dieter Wassmann.
- Tom Wesselmann, an American Pop artist, painter, sculptor and printmaker.
- H. C. Westermann, an American sculptor and printmaker.
- Jeffrey Vallance, an American artist known for his assemblages, drawings, sculptures, paintings and conceptual art.