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Rolls-Royce Unveils Black Badge Cullinan By Cyril Kongo With Exclusive Hand-Painted Artwork

When Rolls-Royce hands its most rebellious motor car to one of the world’s most celebrated modern artists, the result is not merely luxury, it is moving contemporary art on four wheels

When Rolls-Royce hands its most rebellious motor car to one of the world’s most celebrated modern artists, the result is not merely luxury, it is moving contemporary art on four wheels

The Black Badge Cullinan by Cyril Kongo transforms craftsmanship into canvas, where starlight headliners, veneers, and coachlines become expressions of individuality. Built in just five examples, it is less an SUV and more a rolling private gallery for the world’s most discerning collectors. There are luxury SUVs, and then there is the Rolls-Royce Motor Cars Black Badge Cullinan by Cyril Kongo, which appears to have arrived from a parallel universe where graffiti artists run Mayfair and gallery owners order their champagne by the crate. Because this is not simply a Cullinan with some colourful stitching and a clever press release. No, this is Rolls-Royce deciding that the best way to celebrate individuality is to hand over its most subversive motor car to Cyril Kongo, a man whose artistic language is louder than most supercars. The result is glorious madness. Five motor cars. Five private commissions. Five rolling sculptures that look like they should be displayed under museum lighting rather than parked outside a private jet terminal. And somehow, brilliantly, it all works.

The Black Badge Cullinan has always been the rebellious child of the Rolls-Royce family

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The Kongoverse Inside

The Black Badge Cullinan has always been the rebellious child of the Rolls-Royce family. Darker, sharper, and less interested in polite conversation, it is the perfect canvas for Kongo’s work. Rolls-Royce calls it “The Kongoverse,” which sounds like either an art exhibition or something Marvel forgot to release.

Inside, the cabin begins with a black foundation, but then explodes into vivid colour. For the first time, the interior is divided into four distinct zones. The driver’s seat glows in Phoenix Red, the front passenger sits in Turchese, while the rear cabin is split between Forge Yellow and Mandarin. These tones appear across stitching, piping, seat inserts, lambswool carpets, and even the embroidered RR monograms. It is wonderfully excessive. Like wearing four bespoke suits at once and somehow making it look tasteful.

The true theatre sits above your head. Each Black Badge Cullinan by Cyril Kongo features

A Starlight Headliner Painted By Hand

The true theatre sits above your head. Each Black Badge Cullinan by Cyril Kongo features a hand-painted Starlight Headliner with 1,344 fibre-optic stars, but this is no ordinary celestial roof. Kongo transformed it into a cosmic playground of imagined planets, constellations, equations, and references to quantum physics. Apparently, while most of us stare at the night sky and think about dinner, Kongo sees infinity symbols and mathematical poetry.

Rolls-Royce artisans prepared more than 70 paint colours for him to work with, using sponges, brushes, and airbrushes to bring the compositions to life. Then came the truly obsessive bit: every star was individually counted, marked, hand-punched, and positioned according to the artist’s design. There are Blue, Phoenix Red, Forge Yellow, Lime Green, and Cobalto Blue illuminations, plus eight Shooting Stars and, for the first time ever, one final shooting star stretching across the entire ceiling. That is not a roof lining. That is astronomy with leather seats.

The true theatre sits above your head. Each Black Badge Cullinan by Cyril Kongo features

Veneers That Became Art

Then there is the woodset. Normally, in a Rolls-Royce, the fascia, centre console, Picnic Tables, and rear Waterfall are masterpieces of polished restraint. Here, they have become a continuous hand-painted artwork stretching across 19 veneered surfaces. Each piece was first painted black and mounted in Rolls-Royce’s paint laboratory, where Kongo worked directly onto them using airbrushes of varying sizes. The result is a flowing composition that feels less like trim and more like a private mural hidden inside the world’s most expensive lounge. To protect the work, artisans applied ten layers of lacquer before sanding and polishing each surface to perfection because apparently one simply does not clear-coat art in a Rolls-Royce.

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Outside, the car wears a rich Blue Crystal Over Black finish

Exterior Drama, With A First-Ever Gradient Coachline

Outside, the car wears a rich Blue Crystal Over Black finish, where deep black paint is infused with blue particles that shimmer under sunlight. It is subtle until it is not. Then comes the real headline: Rolls-Royce’s first-ever Gradient Coachline. On the left side, Phoenix Red melts into Forge Yellow. On the right, Mandarin fades into Turchese. Both incorporate Kongo’s signature tag motif, making the coachline feel less like decoration and more like a signature across a masterpiece.

Even the brake callipers refuse to behave traditionally. Behind the 23-inch Part Polished Black Badge alloy wheels, each calliper wears a different colour: Phoenix Red, Turchese, Forge Yellow, and Mandarin, all matching the coachline and interior palette. This is the automotive equivalent of wearing mismatched designer shoes and making everyone wish they had done it first.

The Black Badge Cullinan by Cyril Kongo is not transportation. It is not even an SUV

Hidden Signatures And Private Office Exclusivity

Kongo’s tag motif appears everywhere. On the umbrellas concealed in the doors. On the Bespoke Illuminated Treadplates. Inside the sun visor. Even hidden inside the luggage compartment lid. It is the sort of detail only the owner may notice, which is precisely why it matters. The project itself was curated through Rolls-Royce Private Offices in New York, Seoul, and Goodwood, invitation-only creative hubs where collectors commission machines that exist far beyond ordinary luxury. All five examples are already allocated to collectors worldwide. Which means if you wanted one, you are either too late or not rich enough. Possibly both. And that, really, is the point.

The Black Badge Cullinan by Cyril Kongo is not transportation. It is not even an SUV. It is proof that when art and engineering collide at the very highest level, the result is something outrageous, theatrical, and wonderfully unnecessary. Which, if we are being honest, is exactly what Rolls-Royce should be.

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