Showing posts with label Jean-Michel Basquiat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jean-Michel Basquiat. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 11, 2022

Postmodernism -- and Jean-Michel Basquiat's place therein

Modernism, as discussed in a prior post, "sought a new alignment with the experience and values of modern industrial life" but, by the middle of the 20th century, "modern life" had been disrupted (The Art Story):

  • The world had experienced two world wars with millions of lives lost
  • Nuclear weapons had been used 
  • Communist ideals had been shattered, partly by its own weight and partly by a re-invigorated post-war capitalism.

Societal changes had been accompanied by changes in the art world: The center of avant-garde painting had shifted from Europe to NYC and Abstract Expressionism, and its practitioners, were flourishing. 

It was at this point that the first cracks begun to appear in the modernist superstructure as young artists began to question the relevance of the art for the times as well as the perch occupied by the feted artists. Artists like Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg began to experiment with new styles that borrowed and recreated imagery from the mass culture that surrounded them. This was the beginning of the neo-Dada movement -- "the first of the genuinely postmodern movements" -- which would itself give rise to other postmodern movements such as POP Art and Minimalism.

The chart immediately below captures the main postmodernist movements while the two images following show works created by Johns and Rauschenberg during the neo-Dada period.

Monogram, 1955 - 1959
Robert Rauschenberg

White Flag, 1955
Jasper Johns

If neo-Dada is the first of the postmodern movements, what exactly is postmodernism. According to MOMA, it is a reaction against modernism, "less a cohesive movement than an approach and attitude toward art, culture and society" whose main characteristics include:

  • Anti-authoritarianism
  • Collapsing of the distinction between high culture and mass or popular culture
  • Collapsing of the distinction between art and everyday life
  • A deliberate use of earlier styles and conventions
  • An eclectic mixing of different artistic and popular styles and media.
Selected pieces of postmodern art are depicted below.

Marilyn Diptych, 1962
Andy Warhol

The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living, 1991
Damien Hirst

Untitled, c. 1996
Jamali

Jean-Michel Basquiat
Jean-Michel Basquiat transitioned from the text-focused Graffiti Art to the imagery-based Neo-Expressionism movement, a movement described by Phoebe Hoban, in her book Basquiat: A Quick Killing in Art, as
...  merely a trendy fashion statement, a bleep on the radar ... The Abstract Expressionists came together to promote a cause, while the East Village artists came together to promote themselves.
Jean-Michel Basquiat
By Source, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=29602496

Basquiat was born in Brooklyn in 1960. One of the seminal events in his youth was being hit by a car in the street of his residence, necessitating a lengthy rehabilitation. During his rehab, his mother gave him a copy of the Book Gray's Anatomy which he studied assiduously. The influence of that book is apparent in much of his art.

Jean-Michel dropped out of school prior to graduation and fell into the graffiti culture which was then taking off in Brooklyn and the Bronx. He tagged with a fellow artist under the moniker Samo© but when they fell out, he killed off the designation.

New York City was falling apart at this time. It was deep in debt and awash in deserted and abandoned buildings. The cheap rent attracted artists to the Lower East Side and this mish mosh of practitioners from all branches of the arts yielded a unique, gritty culture. Basquiat fell right into this, steering away from graffiti and wanting to be considered an artist.

During this time he could not afford art supplies so he painted on anything that was available -- scraps of paper, doors from abandoned buildings, etc. His artistic skills began to be noticed but his sprint to the top really began with his participation in the January 1981 art show at PS1 in Queens that was organized by Diego Cortez. Basquiat's path to stardom post that meeting is shown in the chart below.


Untitled (Word on Wood) is one of 17 Basquiat paintings that incorporates wood fence slats. The slats are painted black and divided into two unequal hemispheres. The upper hemisphere is dominated by a blue square with a gold border which serves as a frame for an African-mask-like structure with mismatched oval eyes and bared teeth. A line runs from a distinctly negroid nose through a unibrow to the top of the forehead, dividing the forehead into two unequally adorned hemispheres. The top of the head is festooned with light-brown, cornrow-type structures.

The lower hemisphere is populated by some of the markings for which Basquiat is known. The left, chair-like structure is brown in color and associated with a white comb marking while the right leg is entwined by a green vine and is adjacent to an upturned comb.

Untitled (Word on Wood), 1985
Jean-Michel Basquiat

Yellow Door is a collage of different textured items emplaced on a bright-yellow, two-hemisphere, wooden door. The Spanish word for miracle is repeated a number of times on the structure's upper hemisphere.

Yellow Door (1960), 1985
Jean-Michel Basquiat

Selected additional Basquiat paintings are shown below.

Untitled (Self-Portrait), 1982
Oilstick and ink on paper

Untitled (Man with Microphone), 1982
Oilstick on paperboard

Per Capita, 1981
Acrylic and oilstick on canvas

Arroz con Pollo, 1981
Acrylic and oilstick on canvas

Warrior, 1982
Acrylic and oilstick on wood panel

Untitled, 1982
Acrylic, oilstick, and spray paint on wood

Untitled, 1982
Acrylic, oilstick, and spray paint on wood

Untitled, 1981
Acrylic and oilstick on canvas

Untitled (tenant), 1982
Acrylic and oilstick on canvas

Self-Portrait with Suzanne, 1982
Oilstick on paperboard

Cathleen McGuigan (New York Times, 2/10/85) provides a comprehensive description of Basquiat's paintings:
His color-drenched canvasses are peopled with primitive figures wearing menacing, masklike faces, painted against fields jammed with arrows, grids, crowns, skyscrapers, rockets and words ... His drawings and paintings are edgy and raw, yet they resonate with the knowledge of such modern masters as Dubuffet, Cy Twombly or even Jasper Johns.
Table 1. Characterizing Basquiat's talent
NameProfessionAssessment
Sandro Chia (after the PS1 show)Painter (Italian)“Basquiat’s paintings captured the spontaneity of the City”
“The paintings were full of disparate elements that somehow worked together though there was no apparent system linking them”
John RussellChief art critic, New York Times“Basquiat proceeds by disjunction — that is by making marks that seem quite unrelated, but that turn out to get on very well together”
Vivian RaynorNew York Times Writer“The educated quality of Basquiat’s line and the stateliness of his compositions both of which bespeak a formal training that, in fact, he never had.”
Data Source: Cathleen McGuigan, New Art, New Money, NYT, 2/10/85

Jean-Michel Basquiat died of an overdose in 1988. He was 28 years old.

©EverythingElse238

Friday, October 11, 2019

Bassquiat and Purvis Young at Tampa Museum of Art: Ordinary/Extraordinary Assemblage in Three Acts

Contrary to the museum's protestations to the contrary, the juxtaposition between the lives and art of the black American artists Jean-Michel Basquiat and Purvis Young is thrown into sharp relief in exhibits of their work at Tampa Museum of Art. The two discrete shows (Jean Michel Masquiat: One Master Artist/Two Masterpieces and Purvis Young: 91) are part of an exhibition series titled Ordinary/Extraordinary Assemblage in Three Acts; the third show in the series is titled Sacred Diagrams: Haitian Vodou Flags from the Gessen Collection.

Each of the foregoing can be viewed as a separate show but, according to the museum, are linked by
... the use of found objects, such as discarded wood and repurposed textiles ... More importantly, historical and socio-economic narratives informed by the Afro-Caribbean Diaspora, the black experience in America, as well as European artistic influences unite the artists featured in the series.
I will focus on the Basquiat and Young shows in this post.


This is the second exhibition of both artists works that I have attended this year -- Basquiat at the Brant and Young at the Deland Museum of Art -- and I am struck by more of the contrasts than the commonalities between the two artists. The chart below is illustrative.

The way that the individual shows are exhibited also provides a juxtaposition, with two Basquiat originals emplaced on a wall, with significant white space around each piece, and, in the next room, separated by a perpendicular wall, the cacaphony of the Young exhibition.


The first of the two Basquiat paintings (Untitled (Word on Wood)) is one of 17 Basquiat paintings that incorporates wood fence slats. The slats are painted black and divided into two unequal hemispheres. The upper hemisphere is dominated by a blue square with a gold border which serves as a frame for an African-mask-like structure with mismatched oval eyes and bared teeth. A line runs from a distinctly negroid nose through a unibrow to the top of the forehead, dividing the forehead into two unequally adorned hemispheres. The top of the head is festooned with light-brown, cornrow-type structures.

The lower hemisphere is populated by some of the markings for which Basquiat is known. The left, chair-like structure is brown in color and associated with a white comb marking while the right leg is entwined by a green vine and is adjacent to an upturned comb.

Untitled (Word on Wood), 1985
Jean-Michel Basquiat

The second painting is a collage of different textured items emplaced on a bright-yellow, two-hemisphere, wooden door. The Spanish word for miracle is repeated a number of times on the structure's upper hemisphere.

Yellow Door (1960), 1985
Jean-Michel Basquiat

As you walk around the dividing wall, you are suddenly confronted with the cacaphony of the Young series. The 91 paintings, the totality of the museum's Purvis Young collection, are hung shoulder-to-shoulder from floor to ceiling in honor of the author's "magnum opus:"


For a short period of time in the 1970s, Young installed his paintings from the ground to the rooftops of abandoned storefronts in his neighborhood. The Wall of Respect in Chicago, a mural that featured heroic black men and women painted at the height of the Civil Rights Movement, influenced Young. He aimed to replicate the Wall of Respect in Overtown with his powerful, provocative paintings and often overlapped the paintings in an extreme salon-style hang. Titled Goodbread Alley Mural, the project was on view from approximately 1971-74 until the City of Miami started to dismantle the artwork. The installation on view in this gallery takes inspiration from the Goodbread Alley Mural ...
I found this layout jarring: I was not sure whether I should evaluate it as a mural or evaluate each piece on its own. In general I find Young's work slightly claustrophobic -- due to the object density on his pieces -- and that feeling was on steroids with so many of his pieces stacked together. Museums are requesting that patrons spend more time evaluating paintings on view: I do not believe that this layout advanced that objective.

It is not obvious how the Vodou Flags exhibit fits in with the works of these two well-known artists.

©EverythingElse238

Friday, April 12, 2019

The art of Jean-Michel Basquiat: Brant Foundation, New York City

I had been sitting tight, looking forward to my Basquiat fix in June with the upcoming Guggenheim exhibition titled Basquiat's "Defacement": The Untold Story when, out of the blue, up popped a Brant Foundation exhibition titled Jean-Michel Basquiat (an exhibition that I had not read about previously and had, therefore, not included in my list of must-see exhibitions for 2019). I did not stay surprised for long. I reached out for tickets but the show was sold out. I placed my name on a waiting list and, lo and behold, I got a ticket for a day I was actually going to be in New York.

Jean-Michel Basquiat
By Source, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=29602496

The Brant Foundation
The mission of the Brant Foundation is to support contemporary artists and, towards that end, it exhibits their works at two locations. The newest location (Greenwich being the other) is 421 East 6th Street in NYC, a 100-year-old building which was initially built as a Con Edison substation and, subsequently, served as the home and studio of the artist Walter de Maria from the mid-1980s until his death in 2013.

The building has been renovated by Gluckman Tang Architects, at the behest of the Brant Foundation, wherein 7,000 of its 16,000 square feet is dedicated to exhibition space distributed over four floors.

Brant Foundation NYC location

The Artist
Brant Foundation describes Basquiat on a wall panel on the ground floor of the exhibit:
At the onset of the 1980s, Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960 - 1988) took the art world by storm, with his powerful and highly complex works captivating, first Downtown New York, and then Europe and the rest of the world. Radical in both his artistic practice and life, Basquiat made the streets of Lower Manhattan his studio, joining the creative outpour that was emerging in the late 1970s and 80s in New York City. ... In the space of less than a decade, he achieved a comprehensive oeuvre -- consisting of more than 1,000 paintings and over 2,000 drawings -- marked by rapid and thunderous  success virtually unknown by any other artist. A success which continues to grow, exponentially, to this day and solidifies him as one of the greatest artists of our time.
What had brought this son of a Haitian father and Puerto Rican mother, this drug-using, high-school dropout, from the streets of the Lower East Side to the upper echelons of the art world?

Basquiat was born in Brooklyn in 1960. One of the seminal events in his youth was being hit by a car in the street of his residence, necessitating a lengthy rehabilitation. During his rehab, his mother gave him a copy of the Book Gray's Anatomy which he studied assiduously. The influence of that book is apparent in much of his art.

Jean-Michel dropped out of school prior to graduation and fell into the graffiti culture which was then taking off in Brooklyn and the Bronx. He tagged with a fellow artist under the moniker Samo© but when they fell out, he killed off the designation.

New York City was falling apart at this time. It was deep in debt and awash in deserted and abandoned buildings. The cheap rent attracted artists to the Lower East Side and this mish mosh of practitioners from all branches of the arts yielded a unique, gritty culture. Basquiat fell right into this, steering away from graffiti and wanting to be considered an artist.

During this time he could not afford art supplies so he painted on anything that was available -- scraps of paper, doors from abandoned buildings, etc. His artistic skills began to be noticed but his sprint to the top really began with his participation in the January 1981 art show at PS1 in Queens that was organized by Diego Cortez. Basquiat's path to stardom post that meeting is shown in the chart below.


Cathleen McGuigan (New York Times, 2/10/85) provides a comprehensive description of Basquiat's paintings:
His color-drenched canvasses are peopled with primitive figures wearing menacing, masklike faces, painted against fields jammed with arrows, grids, crowns, skyscrapers, rockets and words ... His drawings and paintings are edgy and raw, yet they resonate with the knowledge of such modern masters as Dubuffet, Cy Twombly or even Jasper Johns.
Table 1. Characterizing Basquiat's talent
Name Profession Assessment
Sandro Chia (after the PS1 show) Painter (Italian) “Basquiat’s paintings captured the spontaneity of the City”
“The paintings were full of disparate elements that somehow worked together though there was no apparent system linking them”
John Russell Chief art critic, New York Times “Basquiat proceeds by disjunction — that is by making marks that seem quite unrelated, but that turn out to get on very well together”
Vivian Raynor New York Times Writer “The educated quality of Basquiat’s line and the stateliness of his compositions both of which bespeak a formal training that, in fact, he never had.”
Data Source: Cathleen McGuigan, New Art, New Money, NYT, 2/10/85

Jean-Michel Basquiat died of an overdose in 1988. He was 28 years old.

The Exhibition
As I mentioned previously, through perseverance, I was able to obtain a ticket to the sold-out exhibition. My entry time was 12:45 but, as I was driving into the City, I got there well before my appointed time. The person monitoring the entry was sympathetic and allowed me in.

I stepped into the ground floor of the building and my ticket was scanned by one of the two or three interns who were assigned this task. I was then directed on to an elevator which would take me to the fourth floor as the exhibition was spread over four floors and was routed from the topmost to the lowest floor. I am still not clear why individual paintings were placed on specific floors.

The paintings on the 4th and 3rd floors had wall cards which indicated the name of the painting (or untitled) and the year of its creation. This practice was abandoned for the final two floors. On each floor there was an i-pad like device which had additional information on the paintings in that area but it was inconvenient because it could only serve one reader at a time.

In that I got there before the official museum opening time, I was able to step right in and view the paintings with relative ease. By the time I concluded my walk-through, there was a lengthy line outside the building waiting for entrance.The look of reverence on the faces of the viewers spoke to the standing that Basquiat has attained in the art-loving community.

The art work of Jean-Michel is captivating. It pulls you in, taking you ever deeper into its essence. The figures are child-like and primitive but there is a depth and complexity that defies your brain as you attempt to compartmentalize and allocate. The works are electric and vibrant, thanks to his use of color. The masters of surrealism sought to paint images derived from their dream states on canvas; one wonders from whence did these images emanate.

I captured most of the pieces in the exhibition on my iPhone and I reproduce them below. I am still continuously scrolling through them, captivated by the unknown, by the emotions that these almost cave-art-like paintings evoke.

Untitled (Self-Portrait), 1982
Oilstick and ink on paper



Untitled (Man with Microphone), 1982
Oilstick on paperboard

Per Capita, 1981
Acrylic and oilstick on canvas

Arroc con Pollo, 1981
Acrylic and oilstick on canvas

Warrior, 1982
Acrylic and oilstick on wood panel

Untitled, 1982
Acrylic, oilstick, and spray paint on wood

Untitled, 1982
Acrylic, oilstick, and spray paint on wood

Untitled, 1981
Acrylic and oilstick on canvas

Untitled (tenant), 1982
Acrylic and oilstick on canvas

Self-Portrait with Suzanne, 1982
Oilstick on paperboard


Untitled (Cars/Teepees), 1981
Oilstick on paper














































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