The Star Malaysia - Star2

From graffiti to Gothic mythology

-

NEARLY a decade after his death, a New York City retrospect­ive of the rapper, composer, graffiti artist, painter, sculptor and cosmic theorist Rammellzee hopes to reveal to the world his multifacet­ed, iconoclast­ic work.

While street art has worked its way into everyone’s living room, and a painting by graffiti artist Jean-Michel Basquiat can fetch more that US$100mil (RM 397mil), Rammellzee, although a key figure of 1980s New York, remains – as auction house Sotheby’s put it – “perhaps the greatest street artist you’ve never heard of”.

Like many aspiring artists of his time, a teenage Rammellzee in 1970s Queens, New York, started out spraying on subway trains.

But as time passed, his letters transforme­d into abstract figures – compositio­ns that by the start of the 1980s could be found in galleries, even Rotterdam’s prestigiou­s Boijmans Van Beuningen museum in 1983.

He also rapped – and Basquiat produced – his single Beat Bop, which would go on to be sampled by the Beastie Boys and Cypress Hill. Next, he made a stealthy cameo in Jim Jarmusch’s cult film Stranger Than Paradise .But instead of being propelled to the same heights as Basquiat, Rammellzee changed course – inventing the concept of Gothic futurism, creating his own mythology based on a manifesto. In his Tribeca studio in New York, he materialis­ed his creation in the form of the Letter Racers – huge letters on skateboard­s that symbolise the possibilit­y of free language as an emancipati­on tool.

He also made the Garbage Gods, figurines made of recyclable­s – half the “Recyclers”, and half the “Trashers”. From the 1990s, Rammellzee would appear in public disguised in futuristic warrior get-up. Until his death from heart disease at 49, he remained in this imaginary world, current trends far from his mind.

“Our biggest challenge was how to find a way to take such a multifacet­ed artist, character, myth and try to create a narrative arch that could convey his intentions,” explains Max Wolf of Red Bull Arts New York, which is hosting the retrospect­ive until Aug 26.

The pieces come from private collection­s and Rammellzee’s family.

“The US doesn’t really know a lot of that work, that was created and put into collection­s in Europe and never seen again,” Wolf adds. “So it was important that we try to forage all that and present it here.”

“He had a purpose. He had a certain body of work that he had to complete, to complete this capsule of Gothic futurism. He finished it and then he passed away.” –AFP

Rammellzee: Racing For Thunder is on until Aug 26 at Red Bull Arts, No. 220 West 18th Street, 10011 New York City; opening hours are Wednesday to Sunday, 12pm-7pm. For more informatio­n, go to redbullart­snewyork.com.

 ?? — Photos: AFP ?? By the 1980s, Rammellzee’s work could be found in galleries around the world. Rammellzee began as the usual letterspra­ying teen before his letters began turning into fanciful figures. The multitalen­ted artist invented the concept of Gothic futurism,...
— Photos: AFP By the 1980s, Rammellzee’s work could be found in galleries around the world. Rammellzee began as the usual letterspra­ying teen before his letters began turning into fanciful figures. The multitalen­ted artist invented the concept of Gothic futurism,...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia