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Robin Rhode: Painting in black and white, but only in art

Gaby Reucher als
March 10, 2017

Renowned South African street art performer Robin Rhode employs his black-and-white paintings to lay down the marker against racial segregation.

Work by Robin Rhode (Hatje Cantz Verlag/Paolo Mussat Sartor)
Image: Hatje Cantz Verlag/Robin Rhode

Robin Rhode loves to play around with the power of imagination among his viewers. He paints three-dimensional chalk drawings on walls and streets and integrates himself as an active agent into these images. This "urban artist" has long held a place in the international art world with his monochromatic black-and-white artworks.

Rhode has lived in Germany since 2002, and the architecture here has always fascinated him. So much so, that the South African artist transformed an old brewery into a studio. He uses the space to sketch out his ideas and rehearse his artistic performances. "I consider my studio to be a laboratory," he told DW in an interview. "The sketches and drawings that are created here are exercises." He practices the poses of his body and the movements of his hands in this space.

"When I go out and then find a suitable street or wall, I can very quickly and efficiently turn my ideas into reality." Most of the time, the street art performer discovers an appropriate setting in his hometown of Johannesburg. "The dimensions of the walls there are phenomenal and they reflect so much sunlight."

Robin Rhode enjoyed a solo exhibition in the Galleria Tucci Russo in Italy

Rhode's work with Tucci Russo

Rhode also spends a lot of time in Italy - particularly at the Galleria Tucci Russo in Torre Pellice, where he conceptualized his first major solo exhibition "S.N.O.W." in 2005. "S.N.O.W." stands for "Sculpture in Non-Objective Way." What is implied in that are shapes that appear to be sculptures, but are not objects. Rhode draws abstract, geometric figures and simple objects, such as a bike, a piano or a pipe, onto the walls of buildings and onto streets. He has each step of the process filmed or photographed. He thus also performs as an actor, doing acrobatics on loops, for instance, or smoking a pipe, whose smoke moves across the wall.

Rhode is close friends with Tucci Russo, who is not only interested in exhibiting and selling art, but also in showing the creation of it. Rhode has been able to use Russo's gallery as a research space from the very beginning. Influenced by the Arte Povera movement and by Marcel Duchamp's "Ready Mades," Rhode has also been inspired by Italian artist and photographer Paolo Mussat Sartor, who recorded his performances and gestures in the 1960s and 70s. Rhode adopted Sartor's monochromatic aesthetics of black-and-white photography.

"Harvest" from 2005Image: Hatje Cantz Verlag/Robin Rhode

Gesticulating with his hands is something Rhode is accustomed to. "This notion of playfulness and of using gestures to express oneself - those are part of the society I grew up in. That is still a source of inspiration to me," he said. Funny and even absurd gestures accompany stories that are told in his home country, and Rhode picks up on that with his own gestures and pictures to tell stories. At times they are humorously poetic, at others, influenced by a serious political background marked by apartheid, which was common course in South Africa up until 1994.

Street art with 'Tension'

Rhode works with charcoal, chalk or a paintbrush, but also likes to employ spray paint cans. Yet he doesn't consider himself a graffiti artist; he clearly wants to be a part of the art business, and not an anonymous sprayer. He works together with musicians, who inspire his artworks, and records his performances on video and in photographs, later processing them further on the computer. He also designs his own catalogues, which depict the recorded sequences in photo series. If the viewer were to flip through the pages very quickly, the pictures would appear as though they were moving - just like watching a movie.

"Broken Windows" from 2011

Rhode's latest catalogue is entitled "Tension" and shows 10 years of his artistic work at the Galleria Tucci Russo. The title refers to the tension between Abstraction and Realism, between the body and the painting surface, between inside and out, but also between black and white. Working with these opposites also has a political dimension; it's a symbol of protest and resistance against apartheid.

What is hidden behind a wall? What is really inside and what is outside? One could imagine the wall being the wall of a prison, with the wish to look through a painted window to see what is happening in the outside world. Imagination is the essence of Rhode's art.

"If you come from a politically and geographically marginalized society, then using your imagination can be emotionally liberating," said Rhode. "The seeds were sown in me during apartheid for practicing an imaginary freedom."

A life of racism

Rhode was born in Cape Town in 1976, and studied Fine Art in Johannesburg. He processes his experiences during apartheid not only indirectly, but also quite directly. For instance, in his studio, a larger-than-life comb leans against the wall, with black curls painted around its edges on the wall. "That work addresses the issue of my South African identity. The afro comb is a strong symbol," said Rhode.

Robin Rhode plays on stereotypes with his comb installationImage: DW/S. Jacob-Engelmann

The curls symbolize his African roots. The comb itself was even used during the apartheid period to classify the races. If a comb did not pull through hair easily, then that person's hair was considered an afro and the person was considered "black." Rhode sees himself not as black or white, but as a person of color. "I am proud of my cultural background, which is influenced by many cultures," he said. "I see a lot of positive things in it. It has encouraged me to develop a very authentic artistic language."

Fortifying society through art 

It's not only the streets and the walls of Johannesburg that frequently draw the artist back to his home country. It is also the people who are dear to his heart. Rhode especially wants to support kids. That's why he often integrates them into his work, placing a paintbrush in their hand for them to help him paint. In this way, the picture also partially belongs to them. "When I then leave South Africa again, the pictures stay on the wall untouched because they belong to the people," said Rhode. "The more people who are involved in owning the picture together, the more art can educate and strengthen societies."

Berlin-based Hatje Cantz Verlag has published the photography book "Tension."

 

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