Basquiat's mother, Matilde,
was Puerto Rican and his father, Gerard Jean-Baptiste,
is of Haitian origin and a former Haitian Minister
of the Interior. At an early age, Basquiat displayed an aptitude for art and was encouraged by his mother to draw, paint,
and to participate in other art-related activities. In 1977, when he was 17, Basquiat and his friend Al Diaz started spray-painting
graffiti art on slum buildings in lower Manhattan, adding the infamous signature of "SAMO"
or "SAMO shit" (i.e., "same ol' shit"). The graphics were pithy messages such as "Plush
safe he think; SAMO" and "SAMO is an escape clause". In December 1978, the Village Voice published
an article about the writings. The SAMO project ended with the epitaph SAMO IS DEAD written on the walls of SoHo buildings.
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In 1978, Basquiat dropped
out of high school and left home, a year before graduating. He moved into the city and lived with friends, surviving by selling
T-shirts and postcards on the street, and working in the Unique Clothing Warehouse on Broadway. By 1979, however, Basquiat
gained a certain celebrity status amidst the thriving art scene of Manhattan's East Village, for his regular appearances on Glenn O'Brien's live public-access cable show, TV
Party . In the late 1970s, Basquiat formed a band called Gray, with the then-unknown musician and actor Vincent Gallo. Gray played
at clubs such as Max's Kansas City, CBGB, Hurrahs, and the Mudd Club. Basquiat worked with Gallo again in a film Downtown 81 (a.k.a New York Beat Movie) which featured
some of Gray's rare recordings on its soundtrack.[2] He also appeared in Blondie's video for "Rapture".
Basquiat first started to gain recognition as an artist in June 1980, when he participated
in The Times Square Show, a multi-artist exhibition, sponsored by Collaborative Projects Incorporated (Colab). In 1981, poet,
art critic and cultural provocateur Rene Ricard published "The Radiant Child" in Artforum magazine, helping to launch Basquiat's career to an international stage. During the
next few years, he continued exhibiting his works around New York alongside artists such as Keith Haring, Barbara Kruger, as well as internationally, promoted by such
gallery owners and patrons as Annina Nosei, Vrej Baghoomian, Larry Gagosian, Mary Boone and Bruno Bischofberger. By 1982, Basquiat was
showing regularly alongside Julian Schnabel, David Salle, Francesco Clemente and Enzo Cucchi, thus becoming part of a loose-knit group that art-writers, curators, and collectors would soon be calling the Neo-expressionist movement.
He started dating an aspiring and then-unknown performer named Madonna in the fall of 1982. In 1982, Basquiat met Andy Warhol, with whom he collaborated extensively, eventually
forging a close, if strained, friendship. He was also briefly involved with artist David Bowes.[3][4] By 1984, many of Basquiat's friends were concerned about
his excessive drug
use and increasingly erratic behavior, including signs of paranoia. Basquiat had developed a frequent heroin habit by this point, starting from his early years
living among the junkies and street artists in New York's underground. On February 10, 1985, Basquiat appeared on the
cover of The New York Times Magazine in a feature entitled "New Art, New Money: The Marketing of an American
Artist". As Basquiat's international success heightened, his works were shown in solo exhibitions across major European capitals. Basquiat died of mixed-drug toxicity (he had been combining
cocaine and heroin, known as "speedballing") in his Great Jones Street loft/studio in 1988 several days before what would have been Basquiat's second
trip to the Côte d'Ivoire. After his death, a film biography entitled Basquiat was made, directed by Julian
Schnabel, with actor Jeffrey Wright playing Basquiat. Artistic activities Basquiat's art career is known for his
three broad, though overlapping styles. In the earliest period, from 1980 to late 1982, Basquiat used painterly gestures on
canvas, often depicting skeletal figures and mask-like faces that expressed his obsession with mortality. Other frequently
depicted imagery such as automobiles, buildings, police, children's sidewalk games, and graffiti came from his experience
painting on the city streets. A middle period from late 1982 to 1985 featured multipanel paintings and individual canvases
with exposed stretcher bars, the surface dense with writing, collage and seemingly unrelated imagery.
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These works reveal a strong interest
in Basquiat's black identity and his identification with historical and contemporary black figures and events. On one
occasion Basquiat painted his girlfriend's dress, with his words, a "Little Shit Brown". The final period, from
about 1986 to Basquiat's death in 1988, displays a new type of figurative depiction, in a new style with different symbols
and content from new sources. This period seems to have also had a profound impact on the styles of artists who admired Basquiat's
work. Basquiat's lasting creative influence is immediately recognizable in the work of subsequent and self-taught generational
artists such as Mark Gonzales,
Kelly D. Williams, and Raymond
Morris. In 1982, Basquiat
became friends with pop artist Andy Warhol
and the two made a number of collaborative works. They also painted together, influencing each others' work. Some speculated
that Andy Warhol was merely using Basquiat for some of his techniques and insight. Their relationship continued until Warhol's
death in 1987. Warhol's death was very distressing for Basquiat, and it is speculated by Phoebe
Hoban, in Basquiat, her 1998 biography on the artist, that Warhol's
death was a turning point for Basquiat, and that afterwards his drug addiction and depression began to spiral. Up until 2002, the highest mark that was paid for an original work of Basquiat's was $3,302,500 (set
on 12 November 1998). On 14
May 2002
Basquiat's "Profit I" (a large piece of art measuring 86.5" by 157.5"), owned by heavy
metal band Metallica co-founder Lars Ulrich,
was put up for auction at Christie's.
It was there that the highest mark for a work of Basquiat's was set when "Profit I" sold for $5,509,500.[5] The proceedings of the auction are documented in the film Some Kind of Monster. On 15 May 2007, an untitled Basquiat work from 1981 smashed his previous record, selling at Sotheby's in New York for $14.6 million.[6] - "Every
single line means something."
- "Since
I was seventeen I thought I might be a star. I'd think about all my heroes, Charlie
Parker, Jimi Hendrix… I had a romantic feeling about how these people became famous."
- "I don't think about art when I'm working. I try to
think about life."
- "Believe it
or not, I can actually draw."
- "I
don't listen to what art critics say. I don't know anybody who needs a critic to find out what art is."
- I wanted to be a star, not a gallery mascot.
@copyrights http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Michel_Basquiat#Notes_and_references
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