REMI/ROUGH |
Remi Rough is one of the most respected and sought after UK artists around today. Along with a portfolio of commercial work Remi has exhibited in the UK, Australia, Europe, America and Canada. In August 2008 Remi spoke at London's Tate Modern. As part of the Tate's Street Art exhibition and series, he was invited to talk on the underground history of UK graffiti in front of a sell-out auditorium. Remi is also a musician, designer and author. He still lives in South London where he grew up, with his family. I was privileged to spend some time with Remi recently at his studio, where we told me about his work.
Tim: I wanted to begin by asking you about your history and how you came to be graffiti lettering artist?
RR: Well, I never thought of graffiti as being a career. I was just doing it and it was always something that I wanted to do, but I suppose I always felt like I was being pushed into the graphic design side of things ...”you’ll be great at graphics because it sounds like graffiti ... I don’t know what their rationale was, but everyone always used to push me in this direction; even in school, my careers officers would say it and then, when I finally got on a Graphics Design course – I didn’t like it so I left and worked for my Dad, and then went back and did an art foundation course, which kind of opened it up for me a little.
Tim: Where was that?
RR: Croydon Art College .... I’d nestled the idea, in my brain, that I wanted to paint, that the direction I wanted to go in was fine art, not graffiti, not graphics ... I didn’t want it to be in a block. But then, you know, you get embroiled in the world of graffiti and there are so many rules and regulations, formulae and traditions .... that all come with that which, I suppose, seems quite silly seeing as it’s a rebellious art form ....
Tim: What sort of work did you like then, was there a particular artist, or someone that you liked?
RR: Well ... there were a lot of things that I was aware of. Take, for example from the age of 9 to say 15 I was into very obvious things like Salvidore Dali. I feel that this sort of art was very accessible to a teenager. I didn’t have access to such artists as Jackson Pollock or Franz Jozef Kline. But then, bit by bit, you discover these things .... Also, abstract impressionists, for me, has always been the most interesting aspect of modern/contemporary art. However, having said that, I also love classical art, such as the Pre-Raphaelite work. I love people who can paint, who can capture the detail of a piece of flesh with light on it, you know - as opposed to flesh without light on it – and make it look like REAL flesh. It’s such a broad spectrum, you know, as to what I like and what I don’t like, but coming through the background of what I’ve come from, it took a long time for these things to digest and to become actual visual information and so, slowly, I began to realise that I wanted to become a painter, not a graphic designer.
Tim: What did you want to paint, people, scenes, still life?
RR: I’m not really sure .... I suppose I wanted to apply my skills in a big fashion! I love painting BIG. I love painting large and I guess that stems from being a graffiti artist because you get used to painting walls all the time and the bigger you do it, the better it becomes and then the more Kudos you get. So painting BIG was always interesting for me. And then, as you get older (I’m a year off 40 now!) you kinda look back at the things that make you .... lettering/graffiti .... it’s an abstraction in itself .... you’re taking the alphabet and you’re changing it ... arrows ... dimensional aspects .... and you’re doing it all the time .... you’re abstracting what is normally quite boring alphabet letters.
Tim: Funny you should say that, but in the course that I’m doing, we’ve been looking at people who devised different typefaces and fonts and when Macs came out, these people became quite upset because, you know, these letters were an art form, in themselves, and then a Mac operator comes in and stretches and distorts them etc and it’s funny that you actually like changing letters .....
RR: But, as graffiti artists, you take it so much further, so that you might take the bare essence of the letter ‘A’ and you change it so that it might have kicks in it, or arrows .... maybe three arrows going upwards towards the left and little bars which shouldn’t be there and connections and where the next letter might be a ‘T’ and so you decide to connect the T bar and the A bar etc. And so, there is nothing that you can’t do with it! But then, you kinda look back at those sort of things which gave you that dynamic, in the first place, and then you start changing it and I guess that’s when things start to become abstract for me. But, as a graffiti artist I’ve always being doing abstract stuff, as I like the idea of colours and shapes.
Tim: Is there is a difference between graffiti lettering and street art, or are they one and the same thing?
RR: No, they’re completely different. Graffiti has a 40 year heritage, starting out in the very late 60’s in Philadelphia and moved on to New York and bit by bit it turned from being something where people just wrote their names (tags), to this astounding art form. It left NY, very early 80’s and then hit London, Paris and Germany, all at the same time and had central hub points in Europe of say London, Berlin .... and it just spread, like a virus .... and I can remember, in the late 80’s, I had pen pals – and remember this was way before computers – that I’d be writing and sending pictures to, as this was the sort of thing that you’d do .... and they’d send me pictures – which is how that information was disseminating! I can remember, I had a pen pal in Kuwait who was painting tanks (laughter!) .... burnt out tanks ... and I can remember thinking I’d like to do that ... paint burnt out tanks!
It just spread like crazy and you had all these different sorts of styles ... you had, in Holland for example, really rounded, bubbly. Also, the style was often defined by the type of paint which was used. In Holland they had a particular sort of paint which, I can’t remember what it was called, but Sparvar in France .... really bright purples, pinks etc and Altona. But we had terrible paint in England (laughter). We had Krylon and Homestyle from B&Q, car paint from Halfords (laughter). And so, a lot of what you’d see was dependent on what sort of paint they had. And, you know, I can remember the Parisian style was really explosive and full of lines .... Paris was quite left field and quite out there and that was something that always pricked my visual senses ... the left field of it .... not the norm, not the traditional NY type stuff. That just didn’t interest me at all.
Tim: Was it a bit like Punk was to pop music? Was graffiti a similar sort of thing – a rebellion of a kind?
RR: I think graffiti was the grounds for street art, in a lot of ways ... but, they’re very different. Graffiti is a dialogue between peers ... it’s about the dialogue between the artists or writers and they had no interest in the passersby; they didn’t care if they read it; they didn’t care if they got it, or liked it .... whereas street art is about a dialogue projected outwards to the viewer/audience. There is no dialogue within street art, between the artists, and you can see that by how fragmented the work is. Also, street art is so new and it came so quickly and grew so quickly – and interestingly, it has fallen quickly as well – so that you only have a few artists who have come through it and stood that, short test of time .... Yeah, the critics hammered it, in fact everyone hammered it and because they hammered it so much, that’s why it initially became so big and it actually became bigger than it really is!