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Born in Brooklyn in 1960, Jean-Michel Basquiat lived to the age of only twenty-seven. His meteoric career as an artist lasted no more than eight years. The one-time teenage runaway and high-school dropout was first included in a group exhibition in 1980, and almost immediately knew considerable success, enjoying his first solo exhibition just two years later. Basquiat quickly became a notable figure on the international art scene, mixing with dealers and artists, including Andy Warhol, with whom he established a close working relationship. Borrowing from graffiti and street imagery, cartoons, mythology, and religious symbolism, Basquiat's drawings and paintings explore issues of race and identity, providing social commentary that is both shrewdly observed and biting. Characterized by their intensely personal nature and the raw, almost aggressive handling of paint, these works have an enduring power to move and confound. This book aims to demonstrate the lasting quality of Basquiat's work and its uniqueness within modern art, reevaluating his principal works and explaining his continuing significance as a major painter.

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Basquiat, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Galerie Fabian Boulakia (Paris)

Langue
Année de publication
1990
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4,4
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Langue
Anglais
Publié
1990
Format
agrafé
Pages
87
ISBN10
2862190470
ISBN13
9782862190471
Séries
Évaluation
4,4 sur 5
Description
Born in Brooklyn in 1960, Jean-Michel Basquiat lived to the age of only twenty-seven. His meteoric career as an artist lasted no more than eight years. The one-time teenage runaway and high-school dropout was first included in a group exhibition in 1980, and almost immediately knew considerable success, enjoying his first solo exhibition just two years later. Basquiat quickly became a notable figure on the international art scene, mixing with dealers and artists, including Andy Warhol, with whom he established a close working relationship. Borrowing from graffiti and street imagery, cartoons, mythology, and religious symbolism, Basquiat's drawings and paintings explore issues of race and identity, providing social commentary that is both shrewdly observed and biting. Characterized by their intensely personal nature and the raw, almost aggressive handling of paint, these works have an enduring power to move and confound. This book aims to demonstrate the lasting quality of Basquiat's work and its uniqueness within modern art, reevaluating his principal works and explaining his continuing significance as a major painter.