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Rediscovering Street Art Legend Rammellzee

By Sotheby's

S hape-shifting multimedia artist Rammellzee (1960–2010) was a cult figure of the Street Art scene and a hip-hop pioneer who left behind an astonishingly varied and influential body of work. Over the past few years, Rammellzee’s paintings, collages and sculptural creations have been exhibited at institutions such as the Museum of Modern Art, New York and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, introducing new audiences to one of the most iconoclastic and influential artists of his time. Sotheby’s is thrilled to offer two Rammellzee works: in our Contemporary Art Online sale, currently open for bidding, and another in our 27 September Contemporary Curated auctio𓂃n.

RAMMELLZEE, KNOTTED MINDS, 1989, FROM CONTEMPORARY CURATED.

In the 1970s, Rammellzee’s graffiti art could be seen across the five boroughs of New York City. He made his name by tagging cars of the A train, the subway line that snakes from Far Rockaway, the Queens neighborhood where he grew up, all the way to the Bronx. By the early 1980s, Rammellzee was enmeshed in the Street Art and hip-hop scene which was gaining recognition among the Downtown Manhattan cognoscenti. In 1983, he recorded Beat Bop, a now-legendary rap 12-inch single, which was featured in the climax of Charlie Ahearn’s classic Wild Style, which helped to bring graffiti and Street Art to a much broader audience. The song was produced by Jean-Michel Basquiat, who was friendly with Rammellzee during the early part of his career, depicting him in (1983), currently in the collection of�൲� the Whitney Museum.

STREET ARTIST RAMMELLZEE IN NEW YORK CITY.

As the New York Street Art Scene became world renowned, with artists like Keith Haring and Basquiat gaining wide-spread fame, Rammellzee turned away from graffiti and focused more fully on his art practice, creating paintings and sculptures from found objects and cast-off items. His base of operations was his TriBeCa studio and home, known as the Battle Station, which contained all of his✤ art and existed as a gesamtkunstwerk. Many of the works in the Battle Station referenced his theory of Gothic Futurism – the idea that indivi♑dual letters could be potent, self-signifying enigmas when liberated from standard linguistic structures.

 

Expanding on the logic of aestheticized language flying through the air or charging underground in the form of graffiti writing on the sℱide of trains, Rammellzee dedicated his artistic process to exploring the ways in which material language could become abstracted forms existing outside of fixed meanings.  According to his philosophy, his chosen name of Rammellzee was a mathematical equation that he believed if applied correctly, could ultimately liberate language.

For more about this iconoclastic original, watch our Rammellzee video and see his works first-hand in Sotheby’s New York galleries the week of 25🔯 September.

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