The UK’s first major Basquiat exhibition opens today
Tomorrow, on September 21, the Barbican will open the doors to the first major UK-based exhibition on notorious American artist Jean-Michel Basquiat. The show, entitled Basquiat: Boom for Real, explores his rise to icon status, going from his graffiti beginnings in the early 70s all the way to his death in 1988 at the age of 27.
Never having received formal training but fixated with drawing from the get-go (a trait he is said to have inherited from his mother), Basquiat’s pieces are recognisable from a mile away. Colourful paint splatters are mixed and matched with capitalised sentences, making strong commentary on America’s class system, racial inequality and colonialism.
Basquiat rose to notoriety as part of duo SAMO© (Same Old Shit) at the age of seventeen. Under that moniker, he and text-artist Al Diaz would graffiti capitalised cryptic messages and jokes onto the walls of New York City. Continuing to grow within the post-punk creative world, in 1981 his work is featured in the New York / New Age exhibition, alongside the creations of other soon-to-become icons, such as Robert Mapplethorpe, Keith Haring and Andy Warhol.
Surprisingly, despite Basquiat’s multitude of talents and his worldwide recognition, both as an independent artist and an integral part of the poetic chaos that was the art scene of 80s New York, not one of his artworks are held in a UK public collection. This makes Boom for Real the first British show to show over 100 pieces by the artist, some never before seen, offering a comprehensive retrospective of the iconic artist, including notebooks, drawings and plenty of other memorabilia.
Basquiat: Boom For Real is on at the Barbican Art Gallery, London from September 21 until January 28, 2018.
Biju Belinky is Huck’s staff writer. Follow her on Twitter.
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