[2][3][4] The artist showed the world and the people in it through line drawings, ranging from the figurative to the abstract, most with poetic titles.
In these drawings, created with a sure touch and economy of line, he captured topical events and the atmosphere of The Hague as it was in the 1970s.
Willem Otterspeer [nl] wrote in 2009 a biographic essay[5] called Flarden van een stem.
At the same time Diederiekje Bok made the book Rinus with contributions by Kees van Kooten, Tommy Wieringa, Willem Otterspeer, A.L.
[6] Rinus van den Bosch was in a relationship with Dutch portrait painter Marike Bok.