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Robert Rauschenberg
Air Pocket (Stoned Moon), 1970

In July 1969, Robert Rauschenberg was invited by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to Cape Canaveral, Florida (then known as Cape Kennedy), to witness the launch of the historic Apollo 11 mission. Asked by the NASA Art Program to commemorate the first manned spaceflight to the moon, Rauschenberg enjoyed unrestricted access at NASA’s Florida facilities. He roamed the buildings and adjacent landscape, met with astronauts and other personnel, and was granted access to official NASA photographs and technical documents. This trip profoundly impacted the artist, who came away from the experience energized and with a renewed sense of optimism after having been deeply disillusioned for several years by the course of the Vietnam War and the growing social unrest in the United States.

After the launch, Rauschenberg began work on Stoned Moon (1969–70), a series of thirty-four lithographs that juxtapose hand-drawn passages with imagery that pairs the lush Florida landscape with the crisp industrial aesthetic of the space race. (SFMOMA holds twenty-nine of these prints.) Created in close collaboration with the master printers at Los Angeles–based print studio Gemini G.E.L., the Stoned Moon works are alternately colorful and subdued, and they range in size from just over two feet to more than seven feet in height. The largest and most complex, Sky Garden, represents an extraordinary technical achievement in printmaking, requiring two lithographic stones, four aluminum plates, and a silkscreen to produce the scale and visual effects the artist sought. At eighty-nine inches in height, Sky Garden was the largest hand-pulled lithograph ever created when it was printed in 1969.

Mind-boggling in scale, visual variety, and artistic ambition, Rauschenberg’s Stoned Moon portfolio resonates with the sensory overload of the Apollo launch experience. The individual prints in the series are filled with scenes of astronauts, space suits, complex machinery, and various regional ephemera (tourist maps, orange crate labels, etc.), emphasizing the interconnectedness of nature, mankind, and the astonishing scientific and technological achievements of the space program.

Overview

In July 1969, Robert Rauschenberg was invited by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to Cape Canaveral, Florida (then known as Cape Kennedy), to witness the launch of the historic Apollo 11 mission. Asked by the NASA Art Program to commemorate the first manned spaceflight to the moon, Rauschenberg enjoyed unrestricted access at NASA’s Florida facilities. He roamed the buildings and adjacent landscape, met with astronauts and other personnel, and was granted access to official NASA photographs and technical documents. This trip profoundly impacted the artist, who came away from the experience energized and with a renewed sense of optimism after having been deeply disillusioned for several years by the course of the Vietnam War and the growing social unrest in the United States.

After the launch, Rauschenberg began work on Stoned Moon (1969–70), a series of thirty-four lithographs that juxtapose hand-drawn passages with imagery that pairs the lush Florida landscape with the crisp industrial aesthetic of the space race. (SFMOMA holds twenty-nine of these prints.) Created in close collaboration with the master printers at Los Angeles–based print studio Gemini G.E.L., the Stoned Moon works are alternately colorful and subdued, and they range in size from just over two feet to more than seven feet in height. The largest and most complex, Sky Garden, represents an extraordinary technical achievement in printmaking, requiring two lithographic stones, four aluminum plates, and a silkscreen to produce the scale and visual effects the artist sought. At eighty-nine inches in height, Sky Garden was the largest hand-pulled lithograph ever created when it was printed in 1969.

Mind-boggling in scale, visual variety, and artistic ambition, Rauschenberg’s Stoned Moonportfolio resonates with the sensory overload of the Apollo launch experience. The individual prints in the series are filled with scenes of astronauts, space suits, complex machinery, and various regional ephemera (tourist maps, orange crate labels, etc.), emphasizing the interconnectedness of nature, mankind, and the astonishing scientific and technological achievements of the space program.

Ownership, Exhibition, and Publication Histories

Ownership History

Harry W. and Mary Margaret Anderson, purchased 1970

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, gift of Harry W. and Mary Margaret Anderson, 1977

Exhibition History

Exhibition history not provided for multiples.

Publication History

Robert Rauschenberg, “A ‘Collage’ Comment,” Studio International 178, no. 917 (December 1969): 246–47.

Lawrence Alloway, “The Graphic Art of Robert Rauschenberg,” in Rauschenberg: Graphic Art (Philadelphia: Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania, 1970).

Edward A. Foster, Robert Rauschenberg: Prints 1948/1970 (Minneapolis: Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 1970).

Lawrence Alloway, “Rauschenberg’s Graphics,” Art and Artists 5, no. 6 (September 1970): 20.

Paul Richard, “Apollo 11 as an Art Form,” Washington Post, October 30, 1970.

Robert Hughes, “The Revival of Prints,” Time, January 18, 1971, 56, 57 (ill.).

“Falls Gallery To Exhibit Moon Series,” Buffalo Courier-Express, March 5, 1980.

Mary Lynn Kotz, Rauschenberg, Art and Life (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1990), 178, 179 (ill.), 251.

Kathleen Slavin, Robert Rauschenberg: A Print Survey in Themes, 1952–1992 (New York: Castelli Gallery, 1992).

Jerry Cullum, “Review: ‘Robert Rauschenberg: A Print Survey in Themes, 1952–1992,’” Atlanta Journal–Constitution, October 23, 1992, (ill.).

J. Richard Gruber and Ann Rowson, Robert Rauschenberg: Major Printed Works, 1962–1995 (Augusta, GA: Morris Museum of Art, 1995), 8–9.

Jeffrey Day, “A Modern Print Master Rauschenberg Exhibit Looks at Enduring Art,” State (Columbia, SC), September 17, 1995.

Christopher Knight, “2001: A Space Oddity,” Los Angeles Times, February 10, 2001.

Jane Kinsman, The Art of Collaboration: The Big Americans (Canberra, Australia: National Gallery of Australia, 2002), 13–15.

Robert Saltonstall Mattison, “Space Exploration Works,” chap. 3 in Robert Rauschenberg: Breaking Boundaries (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2003), 105–66.

Lewis Kachur, Robert Rauschenberg: Transfer Drawings from the 1960s (New York: Jonathan O’Hara Gallery, 2007), 15n18.

Lindsay Christians, “A Country in Conflict—Rauschenberg Prints Capture the 1960s in Sharp Detail,” Wisconsin State Journal (Madison), September 13, 2009.

Jaklyn Babington, Stoned Moon Robert Rauschenberg (Canberra, Australia: National Gallery of Australia, 2010).

Larry Gagosian, James Lawrence, John Richardson, et al., Robert Rauschenberg (New York: Gagosian Gallery, 2010), 12 (ill.), 13.

Rauschenberg at Gemini (Pasadena, CA: Armory Center for the Arts, 2010), 10, 11 (ill.).

This listing documents select references that provide general information about the print. It has been reviewed and is complete as of August 31, 2016.

Marks and Inscriptions

Recto: Bottom edge, signature with inscription in pencil in the artist’s hand: “RAUSCHENBERG 20/47 70”, followed by embossed chop marks for copyright and Gemini G.E.L. (© and zodiac symbol for Gemini inside a circle)

Verso: By chop marks, stamp in light gray ink: “GEMINI G.E.L. LOS ANGELES, CALIF.”; below stamp, in pencil: “RR69-286”

Artwork Info

Artwork title
Air Pocket (Stoned Moon)
Date created
1970
Classification
print
Medium
lithograph
Dimensions
36 in. × 51 in. (91.44 cm × 129.54 cm)
Date acquired
1977
Credit
Collection SFMOMA
Gift of Harry W. and Mary Margaret Anderson
Copyright
© Robert Rauschenberg Foundation and Gemini G.E.L.; published by Gemini G.E.L.
Permanent URL
https://www.sfmoma.org/artwork/77.102.15
Artwork status
Not on view at this time.

Views of the Artwork (1)

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