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Robin Rhode: New Museum of Contemporary Art/Perry Rubenstein Gallery/Museum for African Art.


Robin Rhode, a young South African artist who seemed to be everywhere in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 last month, has such a light touch that fears of overexposure overexposure

too long an exposure time or too high a milliamperage causing too black a picture, loss of detail and some anomalies of translucency.
 may be safely set aside. His performances, which have the make-believe quality of mime, are so quickly executed as to be over almost before they begin, leaving only mental afterimages of fleeting gestures. A few chalk and charcoal drawings made on the run extend the life of these now-you-see-'em-now-you-don't actions. Yet sensations linger. When he drew a life-size image of a car on a large, white cardboard box cardboard box ncaja de cartón

cardboard box n(boîte f en) carton m

cardboard box card n
 in the center of the main gallery at the New Museum, then proceeded to smash the "windows" with a crowbar, shattering a "door" and climbing into the "vehicle" to cause more damage from the inside, the effect of this fake violence was not fake at all. A sense of unnerving un·nerve  
tr.v. un·nerved, un·nerv·ing, un·nerves
1. To deprive of fortitude, strength, or firmness of purpose.

2. To make nervous or upset.
 danger was the visceral response to this game of "let's pretend."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Darkness and danger are always present in the work of South African artists List of South African Artists Individual artists

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, no matter the attempts to whitewash whitewash, white fluid commonly used as an inexpensive, impermanent coating for walls, fences, stables, and other exterior structures. It varies in composition, being generally a mixture of lime (quicklime), water, flour, salt, glue, and whiting, with other  the aftereffects aftereffects after nplNachwirkungen pl  of apartheid, and, Rhode, like many, remains particularly sensitive to the potential for violence to erupt under the most ordinary circumstances. During a recent performance at Perry Rubenstein Gallery, Rhode took up a position in front of a freshly prepped wall, frequently looking over his shoulder as though anticipating that he might have to quit and run at any time. He quickly drew the outlines of a freestanding public telephone, adding several skillfully rendered receivers connected by a looped cable. He then grabbed an audience member by the wrist and had her "hold" the illusory instrument, which she did, thus pinning her to the wall, spread-eagled like a police suspect. Before one could fully absorb the ingenious humor of this small piece of interactive theater, Rhode had made his way out the door and escaped onto the street, leaving his hapless volunteer to contemplate how to end her contribution to his play.

Remarkably, such performance gems translate well into DVDs. Some of these were exhibited at eye level in the gallery, like framed paintings, one plasma screen per wall. With their stop-start quality, the colorful moving pictures of the artist drawing in chalk on a dark brick wall progress like digital flipbooks. Some share the erase-and-redraw technique of William Kentridge's films, perhaps in homage to a fellow South African, and show Rhode in pantomime with drawn objects. In one he "carries" a huge boom box, and in a series of still photographs shot from above, he "hops" onto a drawing of a bicycle and rides away, Such wish fulfillment wish fulfillment
n.
In psychoanalytic theory, the satisfaction of a desire, need, or impulse through a dream or other exercise of the imagination.
 seems in opposition to the warning about taking photographic portraits in certain cultures, considered as stealing a person's soul; these drawings, instead, are the spirits of objects waiting to be possessed.

An awareness of African custom and European art history, of "street art" (whether by Keith Haring Keith Haring (May 4, 1958 – February 16, 1990) was a pre-eminent artist and social activist whose work responded to the New York street culture of the 1980s.

He was born in Reading, Pennsylvania but grew up in Kutztown and was interested in art from an early age.
 or Samo, aka Jean-Michel Basquiat), and of the deadpan body language of Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin is evident in the fast-paced maneuvers of this young sophisticate. No matter the physical manifestations of his talent, in drawings, photographs, or DVDs, he seems to be well aware of the fragility of it all. An almost invisible work of his in a group exhibition at the Museum for African Art The Museum for African Art is located in the neighborhood of Long Island City in the borough of Queens in New York City (USA). Founded in 1984, the museum is "dedicated to increasing public understanding and appreciation of African art and culture. , comprising slides of street works projected just eight inches high at floor level, seems a modest acknowledgement of how little we are really able to contribute to our world, before, as Marx noted, "all that is solid melts into air."
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Author:Goldberg, RoseLee
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Dec 1, 2004
Words:592
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