Chicago Sun-Times

Well-known graffiti artist Ralphy ‘Redr’ Campos dies of coronaviru­s at age 38

Ralphy ‘Redr’ Campos dies of COVID-19 at 38: ‘He was a ride-or-die guy’

- TOM SCHUBA

Ralphy Campos spent years scaling rooftops, traversing train tracks and leaving his mark along the way.

Campos, a prolific graffiti artist known as “Redr,” quickly became a beloved figure in Chicago’s tightknit community of vandals as he scrawled his name across the city. He died last week of COVID-19 at the age of 38, leaving behind three children.

While much of Campos’ art has been wiped clean by city workers as he moved away from graffiti in recent years, his father said his indelible impression was left on those he loved.

“He really had a great heart,” said Campos’ father, Ralf Campos. “He sympathize­d with others. If you were hurting, he sympathize­d with you and your hurt and your pain. That’s why so many people loved him.”

Ralf Campos first sensed “something wasn’t right” when his son started feeling sick about two months ago. However, the artist and party promoter never displayed the telltale symptoms of coronaviru­s, like a fever or respirator­y issues.

Campos’ condition worsened on Mother’s Day just hours after he visited his mother’s gravesite to leave flowers. That’s when Ralf Campos rushed his son to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where an X-ray revealed he had developed blood clots in his chest and legs.

Two days later, Ralf Campos got an alarming call shortly after he had a phone call with his son.

“The hospital called me back about 10 minutes or so afterwards telling me they needed to resuscitat­e him,” he said, noting that he even asked the caller if they had the wrong number because he had just spoken to his son.

“I said do whatever you have to do, but bring him back,” he added.

Those efforts were ultimately unsuccessf­ul, and Campos was pronounced dead that night, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office. In addition to pneumonia and a blood clot in his lungs, COVID-19 was listed as a primary cause of death.

Prior to his death, Campos was living at his father’s home on the border of the Chicago Lawn and Gage Park neighborho­ods — an area hit particular­ly hard by COVID-19. The home falls in the 60629 zip code, which has recorded 2,506 cases of coronaviru­s, the third most in the state.

Ralf Campos said he was unaware the toll was so high in the area.

“I really gotta be careful out there,” he said, although he said he recently tested negative for the virus and hasn’t experience­d any symptoms.

Meanwhile, other artists have started memorializ­ing Campos, who had been focused on promoting undergroun­d parties and hadn’t actively been doing graffiti for a few years. A massive, silver and black piece with his name appeared last week at the intersecti­on of Pershing and Western, though it was buffed away by the city within days.

“He was a ride-or-die guy,” said a fellow member of CAB 312 crew who helped paint the memorial for his fallen friend and who goes by the name “Track.” “If anything happened, you knew he had your back.”

Ralf Campos said the outpouring of support from his son’s friends has been a bright spot in the wake of his passing.

“I knew that I loved my son so much but I didn’t know how many other people loved up on him,” he said. “It’s just good for me to know that.”

The family held a wake for Campos Wednesday afternoon at Christian Funeral Home in Albany Park, and a funeral was scheduled for Thursday at Mount Auburn Funeral Home in Stickney. A GoFundMe launched to cover the costs of the services has already raised more than $8,200, exceeding its goal of $7,000.

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Ralf Campos stands in front of a giant piece dedicated to his son, who died after contractin­g COVID-19.
FACEBOOK Ralf Campos stands in front of a giant piece dedicated to his son, who died after contractin­g COVID-19.
 ?? PROVIDED PHOTO ?? Ralphy “Redr” Campos was a well-known graffiti artist in Chicago.
PROVIDED PHOTO Ralphy “Redr” Campos was a well-known graffiti artist in Chicago.

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