Monday 21 February 2011

Jean-Michel Basquiat part 2

Jean-Michel Basquiat's work is one of the few examples of how an early 1980s American Punk, or graffiti-based and counter-cultural practice could become a fully recognized, critically embraced and popularly celebrated artistic phenomenon, indeed not unlike the rise of American ‘Hip Hop’ during the same era.

Despite his work's ‘unstudied’ appearance, Basquiat very skillfully and purposely brought together in his art a host of disparate traditions, practices, and styles to create a unique kind of visual collage, one deriving, in part, from his urban-American origins, and in another a more distant, African-Caribbean heritage.

For some critics, Basquiat's swift rise to fame and equally swift and tragic death by drug overdose epitomizes and personifies the overly commercial, ‘hyped up’ international art scene of the mid 1980s, a cultural phenomenon that for many observers was symptomatic of the largely artificial, yet, for some, perversely profitable ‘Bubble Economy’ of the era.

Basquiat's work is an example of how American artists of the 1980s could reintroduce the human figure in their work after the wide success of Minimalism and Conceptualism, thus establishing a dialogue with the more distant tradition of 1950s Abstract Expressionism.

The recipient of posthumous retrospectives at the Brooklyn Museum (2005) and the Whitney Museum of American Art (1992), as well as the subject of numerous biographies and documentaries, including Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radiant Child (2010; Tamra Davis, Dir.), and Julian Schnabel's feature film, Basquiat (1996; starring former friend David Bowie as Andy Warhol), Basquiat and his counter-cultural example persist.


 1983 Horn Player


 1983 Mona Lisa


 1983 The Italian


 1983 Untitled


 1983 Untitled (Leonardo and his Five Grotesque Heads)


 1984 Flexible


 1984 Gastruck


 1984 Untitled


 1984 Untitled (Skull)


 1985 Anthony Clarke


 1985 Overrun


 1985 Tenor


(I don't have titles or dates for the following:)











 Jean-Michel Basquiat died of a heroin overdose in 1988.

Note: A number of images have been removed by me from this post on possible copyright issues. Poul Webb

2 comments:

  1. what a prodigy.... wish our souls will meet in the world to come

    ReplyDelete
  2. i hope I am there with you...

    ReplyDelete

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