


Erased de Kooning Drawing
1953
This landmark conceptual work by Robert Rauschenberg was created in 1953 through the meticulous erasure of a drawing by Abstract Expressionist master Willem de Kooning, whom Rauschenberg approached directly and who reluctantly agreed to provide a drawing for the experiment. The nearly blank sheet retains only faint ghostly traces of the original marks, challenging fundamental assumptions about creation, authorship, and what constitutes a work of art. Fellow artist Jasper Johns devised the labeling and framing scheme, inscribing the title, artist name, and year on a small plaque below the paper as an integral component of the finished piece. The gilded frame and handwritten label are essential to the work's identity, providing the sole legible evidence of the conceptually charged act at its origin.
- Medium
- traces of drawing media on paper with label and gilded frame
- Dimensions
Notes
Inscription on label below drawing reads: ERASED de KOONING DRAWING / ROBERT RAUSCHENBERG / 1953. Label and gilded frame devised by Jasper Johns are considered integral parts of the finished artwork. In 2010 SFMOMA used digital capture and processing technologies to enhance and reveal remaining traces of the original de Kooning drawing. SFMOMA permanent URL: https://www.sfmoma.org/artwork/98.298. Copyright: Robert Rauschenberg Foundation. Artwork status as of document date: Not on view.
More by Robert Rauschenberg
Collectors of Robert Rauschenberg
Also spotted by
Artists in conversation

Jasper Johns
American · b. 1930

Johns shares Rauschenberg's Neo-Dada sensibility and mastery of printmaking techniques including lithography and screenprint, combining layered imagery with collage elements and social symbolism on paper to blur boundaries between abstraction and narrative.

James Rosenquist
American · b. 1933

Rosenquist similarly fused bold colorful imagery with social commentary and experimental mixed media printmaking in the 1970s, layering fragmented visual narratives that bridge Abstract Expressionist energy with Pop and activist sensibilities.

Eduardo Paolozzi
British · b. 1924

Paolozzi created densely layered screenprints and collages combining found imagery, textile references, and abstract passages that closely parallel Rauschenberg's experimental approach to mixed media printmaking and paper collage with social and cultural commentary.

![Duet [Anagram (A Pun)]](https://rtwaymdozgnhgluydsys.supabase.co/storage/v1/object/public/artwork-images/1BDDC6C9-713B-4E33-A3AB-1D77A076A44C/C31FBA06-7157-46C9-838D-F46B2CE3302E/0.jpg)
Start the Discussion
Request access to join the discussion