Los Angeles County Museum of Art - LACMA
Los Angeles
5905 Wilshire Boulevard
323 8576000
WEB
Robin Rhode
dal 10/3/2010 al 5/6/2010
Mon, Tues and Thur noon-8 pm; Fri noon-9pm; Sat and Sun 11am-8pm

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Robin Rhode



 
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10/3/2010

Robin Rhode

Los Angeles County Museum of Art - LACMA, Los Angeles

An exhibition of the artist's recent work, including photo compositions, video animation, sculpture, installation, and a charcoal wall drawing made solely for LACMA. On view the body of work represents Rhode's ongoing interest in urban street culture and his South African identity, as well as his unique practice of combining drawing and performance. "Robin Rhode is an artist with a unique vision who embraces play and whimsy as unlikely means to deal with serious contemporary topics" (Leslie Jones).


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The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) presents Contemporary Projects 12: Robin Rhode, an exhibition of the artist’s recent work, including photo compositions, video animation, sculpture, installation, and a charcoal wall drawing made solely for LACMA. On view from March 11 to June 6, 2010, the body of work represents Rhode’s ongoing interest in urban street culture and his South African identity, as well as his unique practice of combining drawing and performance.

“Robin Rhode is an artist with a unique vision who embraces play and whimsy as unlikely means to deal with serious contemporary topics,” says LACMA curator Leslie Jones. “We’re honored to host his first Los Angeles exhibition and excited to showcase his wall drawing meant exclusively for LACMA.”

In 1998 Rhode chalked the image of a bicycle on a Johannesburg city wall, and then attempted to “ride” it. The action is captured in a series of photographs in which the artist fails to mount the “bike,” then checks the “tires” and “chain” before finally grabbing the “handlebars” and “pushing.” Inspired by a childhood initiation ritual wherein senior pupils forced younger ones to interact with objects drawn on the school lavatory walls, Rhode transforms a child’s game into a compelling and innovative form of expression. Since the late 1990s, Rhode has used photography to record his (or a doppelganger’s) interactions with drawings, resulting in photocompositions and video animations reminiscent of disassembled flip books and stop-action films that address important cultural, social, and political issues.

In the photocomposition Juggla (2007), an anonymous black man in bedraggled clothes and a top hat enters the frame and appears to toss or juggle two black balls that double as hands. Inspired in part by a famous Cape Town carnival (colloquially known as the Coon Carnival and officially as the Cape Town Minstrel Carnival) that involves numerous street performers, Rhode clearly alludes (through his costume choice and use of “old-fashioned” black-and-white photography) to the problematic history of minstrelsy.

In his sculpture Soap and Water (2007), Rhode continues to explore the image of the bicycle as a symbol of desire, as very few children in his Johannesburg neighborhood actually owned a bike. Like his chalk drawings, the material used to make this object is ephemeral. Made out of a green soap popular in South Africa, a life-size bicycle lies horizontally on the floor next to a metal bucket filled with water. The combination of soap and water suggests the possibility of the bicycle dissolving away, leaving only a sudsy mess and a memory.

Rhode’s other works on view include Kite (2008), an installation consisting of an image of two hands (the artist’s own) that “grasp” strings attached to a kite-shaped projection of treetops as viewed from below in a moving vehicle; Promenade (2008), a video animation that captures an anonymous performer’s playful, then precarious, encounter with diamond shapes rendered in chalk; and Pan’s Opticon (2008), a series of fifteen photographs featuring a black man in a black straw hat who appears to be drawing with an architect’s compass that projects from his eyes. Also on view will be a charcoal wall drawing to be executed as a performance on opening night. The performance will be videotaped and then played throughout the duration of the exhibition.

In his unique and enthralling practice, Rhode, a self-described “post- apartheid kid,” deftly negotiates South African culture and the history of art, opticality, and related politics of vision, and presents them in an innovative and compelling mise-en-scène that enchants as much as it enlightens.

Born in Cape Town in 1976, Rhode moved to Johannesburg in 1984, where he studied art at the Witwatersrand Technikon from 1995 to 1998 and film at the South African School of Film, Television, and Dramatic Arts until 2000. Currently based in Berlin, Rhode has shown extensively in Europe and New York, and his work has been the subject of three career-survey exhibitions at the Haus der Kunst, Munich; the Hayward Gallery, London; and the Wexner Center for the Arts, Ohio. This is his first museum exhibition in Los Angeles.

Programming
In conjunction with the exhibition, LACMA is featuring a conversation between curator Leslie Jones and Robin Rhode on March 11 that will touch on the latest trends in the artist’s work, as well as the site-specific piece he has created for the museum. Additionally, on May 27, LACMA’s Art & Music series will present Christopher O’Riley on piano in celebration of the exhibition. During the performance, two of Rhode’s video animations will make their West Coast debut.

Credit
This exhibition was organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and made possible by the Contemporary Projects Endowment Fund. Contributors to the fund include Mr. and Mrs. Eric Lidow, Ronnie and Vidal Sassoon, Steve Martin, the Broad Art Foundation, Bob Crewe, Tony and Gail Ganz, Ansley I. Graham Trust, Peter Norton Family Foundation, Barry and Julie Smooke, and Sandra and Jacob Y. Terner.

Image: courtesy of the artist, Perry Rubenstein Gallery, New York and Tucci Russo. Studio per l'Arte Contemporanea, Torre Pellice © Robin Rhode

Press Contact: For additional information, contact LACMA Communications at
press@lacma.org or 323 857-6522.

Opening and Conversations with Artists Thursday, March 11, 7pm

LACMA
5905 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA
Museum Hours and Admission: Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday, noon–8 pm
Friday, noon–9 pm
Saturday and Sunday, 11 am–8 pm
closed Wednesday
Adults $12; students 18+ with ID and senior citizens 62+ $8
children 17 and under are admitted free. Admission (except to specially ticketed exhibitions) is free the second Tuesday of every month and on Target Free Holiday Mondays. After 5 pm, every day the museum is open, LACMA’s “Pay What You Wish” program encourages visitors to support the museum with an admission fee of their choosing.

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