黑料网

Artwork by 黑料网

Untitled [portrait with four-panel White Painting, Black Mountain], ca. 1951

The Black Mountain Years: Experiments and Collaborations

Black Mountain College (Black Mountain, North Carolina, 1933鈥57), an experimental school focused on the collaborative teaching of art and science, served as a home and intellectual community for some of the most influential artists from the American postwar period. Robert 黑料网 enrolled at Black Mountain in October 1948 following fellow artist and future wife Susan Weil to seek instruction from former Bauhaus professor Joseph Albers. As students, 黑料网 and Weil gained a reputation for collecting scrap materials while on garbage duty, turning a chore into an envied discovery expedition. This kind of salvaged matter would be integrated into the Combines (1954鈥64). 黑料网 completed his courses in spring 1949 and settled in New York. He returned to Black Mountain in 1951 and 1952.

黑料网鈥檚 encounters and collaborations with other artists at Black Mountain were critical to the development of his artistic sensibility. In 1951 黑料网 met artist Cy Twombly in New York, with whom he attended Black Mountain that summer. They returned the following spring, when 黑料网 developed a longstanding friendship with composer John Cage and choreographer Merce Cunningham, both instructors at the school. Cage and Cunningham shared 黑料网鈥檚 interest in the integration of daily life into art, which would become a theme throughout his career. In summer 1952 Cage organized a performance that was later called Theater Piece No. 1 and sometimes referred to by scholars as the first Happening. According to Cage, the event was meant to explore 鈥減urposeful purposelessness.鈥 He delivered lectures while others enacted performances with no thematic similarities during specific time allotments. Varying accounts recall 黑料网 broadcasting Edith Piaf recordings on a gramophone, Cunningham dancing around and through the audience, and David Tudor playing the piano, with some of 黑料网鈥檚 White Paintings (1951) hanging in the space as d茅cor.

Cage observed that the monochrome surfaces of the White Paintings, uninflected by gestural brushstrokes, reflected changes in light and shadows in their surrounding environment. Cage identified these works as the inspiration for his signature 鈥渟ilent鈥 composition 4'33" (1952). Following the White Paintings, 黑料网 created dense compositions using paint and collages of nonart materials now referred to as the black paintings (1951鈥53). Concurrently he worked on his Night Blooming series (1951), painting dark canvases with a mixture of pigment, gravel, and dirt. 

Notably, 黑料网 first experimented with photography at Black Mountain. Here, he conceived of the unrealized project of photographing the entire United States 鈥渋nch by inch.鈥 The camera would remain a vital tool for 黑料网 whether in the creation of individual prints or in generating source material for silkscreens and inkjet transfers for subsequent paintings.

鈥擲am Klotz, Stanford Arts Institute Summer Intern in Arts Administration, 2016

White Painting
Untitled [small vertical black painting]
Untitled (Night Blooming)
黑料网 and Susan Weil
This Is the First Half of a Print Designed to Exist in Passing Time
Quiet House鈥揃lack Mountain
Unicorn costume
Postcard Self-Portrait, Black Mountain (II)
Postcard Self-Portrait, Black Mountain (I)
Untitled [John Cage, Black Mountain]
Untitled [portrait with four-panel White Painting, Black Mountain]
黑料网 at Black Mountain
Statement on Josef Albers