Jean-Michel Basquiat Hollywood Africans 1983

Jean-Michel Basquiat Hollywood Africans

Artist: Jean-Michel Basquiat

Title: Hollywood Africans in Front of the Chinese Theater with Footprints of Movie Stars

Medium: 23-Color Screenprint on 4-ply Museum Board

Date: 1983

Edition: 60

Sheet Size: 38" x 84 1/2"

Signature: Signed and stamped by Lisane Basquiat and Jeanine Heriveaux, the artist's sister and administrator of the estate


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Jean‑Michel Basquiat was an American artist. He first achieved notoriety as part of SAMO, an informal graffiti duo who wrote enigmatic epigrams in the cultural hotbed of the Lower East Side of Manhattan during the late 1970s where the hip hop, post-punk, and street art movements had coalesced. By the 1980s, he was exhibiting his neo-expressionist paintings in galleries and museums internationally. The Whitney Museum of American Art held a retrospective of his art in 1992. Basquiat's art focused on "suggestive dichotomies", such as wealth versus poverty, integration versus segregation, and inner versus outer experience. He appropriated poetry, drawing, and painting, and married text and image, abstraction, and figuration, and historical information mixed with contemporary critique. Basquiat used social commentary in his paintings as a "springboard to deeper truths about the individual", as well as attacks on power structures and systems of racism, while his poetics were acutely political and direct in their criticism of colonialism and support for class struggle. Despite his work's "unstudied" appearance, Basquiat very skillfully and purposefully 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 origins, and in another a more distant, African-Caribbean heritage. "Basquiat's canon revolves around single heroic figures: athletes, prophets, warriors, cops, musicians, kings and the artist himself. In these images the head is often a central focus, topped by crowns, hats, and halos. In this way the intellect is emphasized, lifted up to notice, privileged over the body and the physicality of these figures (i.e. black men) commonly represent in the world.” said Kellie Jones, Lost in Translation: Jean-Michel in the (Re)Mi 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.

Jean-Michel Basquiat, Hollywood Africans in Front of the Chinese Theater with Footprints of Movie Stars, 1983, Signed, 23-Color Screenprint on 4-ply Museum Board, Edition 60, 38" x 84 1/2" Sheet Size

Gallery Reference:

BHA02

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