Featured Artist | Rodney Bode

Rodney Bode

Rapid City, SD
info@gallerysix13.com

Rodney Bode is an American painter and sculptor whose life and art have remained outside the boundaries of culture. Born in 1941, and having lived most of his adult life in rural Idaho and South Dakota, Bode is an outsider artist whose vast collection of paintings and sculpture were only recently discovered after his institutionalization in the South Dakota state psychiatric hospital where he is being treated for schizophrenia. Bode will be 80 years old September, 2021.

The label ‘Outsider Art’ created by Jean Dubuffet in the 1940s, certainly describes Rod Bode’s prolific collections of paintings and sculpture. Created in the sparse rural areas in Idaho and the plains of western South Dakota, unseen by the public, Bode’s “self-taught” creations were certainly “produced beyond the boundaries of the mainstream art world.”

Painted Pony / no.2051 | Sculpture - Iron, Pony Skull, Beads, Found Objects | 67"h x 41"w x 25"d
Painted Pony / no.2051 | Sculpture – Iron, Pony Skull, Beads, Found Objects | 67″h x 41″w x 25″d
Brother Von Stauffenberg / no.1219 | Acrylic on Canvas | 63"h x 29"w
Brother Von Stauffenberg / no.1219 | Acrylic on Canvas | 63″h x 29″w
Horsemanship / no.2054 | Sculpture - Iron, Found Objects | 68"h x 30"w x 23"d
Horsemanship / no.2054 | Sculpture – Iron, Found Objects | 68″h x 30″w x 23″d
Blue Moon / no.1225 | Acrylic on Canvas | 70"h x 52"w
Blue Moon / no.1225 | Acrylic on Canvas | 70″h x 52″w

My work is loosely based on the figure, sometimes morphing into quirky and other worldly beings. The figures I create, some creepy and dark are not to be found on the street but rather in one’s imagination or dreams creating an alternate universe. My ceramic figures inhabit boats, circular and square stands, clay or wooden wagons with wheels, figures sitting on animals or chairs and recently figures appear in portraits.

Marilyn Richeda

South Salem, NY
marilynricheda.com
@marilynricheda

My work is loosely based on the figure, sometimes morphing into quirky and other worldly beings. The figures I create, some creepy and dark are not to be found on the street but rather in one’s imagination or dreams creating an alternate universe. My ceramic figures inhabit boats, circular and square stands, clay or wooden wagons with wheels, figures sitting on animals or chairs and recently figures appear in portraits.

Although my figures are pared-down minimalist in outside appearance, I mean for them to have complicated and subtle inner lives. For me, they carry the heavy weight of emotional fragility.

Wondering how to live in the world with others … this is my way of speaking through my art, my way of being in the world.

Girl Bandit | Ceramic/porcelain | 4.5"h x 3.5"w x .5"d
Girl Bandit | Ceramic/porcelain | 4.5″h x 3.5″w x .5″d
Flower Bandit | Ceramic/earthenware | 4.5"h x 3.5"w x .25"d
Flower Bandit | Ceramic/earthenware | 4.5″h x 3.5″w x .25″d
Horse with Rider | Ceramic/earthenware | 3.5"h x 4.5"w x .5"d
Horse with Rider | Ceramic/earthenware | 3.5″h x 4.5″w x .5″d
Blue Dress | Ceramic/earthenwaren |4.5"h x 3.5"w x .5"d
Blue Dress | Ceramic/earthenwaren |4.5″h x 3.5″w x .5″d