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

POSE: Maria Baibakova / Vogue / November 2011

Written By UNDER MAINTENANCE on Sunday, November 13, 2011 | 2:41 PM


MARKING HER MARK
TEXT BY DODIE KAZANJIAN
PHOTOGRAPH BY NORMAN JEAN ROY 

Art world Wonder Woman Maria Baibakova stands in front of a Basquiat painting for a photo published in the November 2011 issue of Vogue magazine.

The 26-year-old sophisticate is founder of Baibakova Art Projects (BAP) in Moscow.

Established in 2008, BAP is a private, non-profit institution that supports and sustains the development of emerging and experimental Russian artists worldwide.

BAP is currently expanding its focus on education with a new initiative that will bring together an international community of thinkers, writers and artists to reinvigorate the act of reading in the digital age.


Pick up a copy of Vogue's November issue to see more photos and to read the complete story.

Baibakova Art Projects Blog



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POSE: Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi / Architectural Digest / November 2011

Written By UNDER MAINTENANCE on Monday, October 10, 2011 | 10:30 AM

Labor of Love
Architectural Digest - November 2011
TEXT BY PETER HALDEMAN
PHOTOGRAPHY BY ROGER DAVIES
PRODUCED BY CARLOS MOTA

Judging from the impressive layout of their Beverly Hills estate in the November 2011 issue of Architectural Digest, Portia de Rossi and Ellen DeGeneres don’t joke around when it comes to home décor or their art collection. The design-savvy couple cheerfully pose (above) in a sitting room off the kitchen where a large collaborative painting by Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat hangs. To the left of the painting is a drawing by Bill Traylor. The magazine reports: “They both admire the work of Jean-Michel Basquiat, whose raw Neo-Expressionist  painting Untitled (Aopkhes) enlivens a corner of the living room.”
 
Pick up a copy of AD's November issue to see more photos and to read the complete story. In the meantime, click here for a sneak peek inside Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi's home.

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PROVENANCE: The Basquiat in the Bodega / New York Magazine / September 26, 2011

Written By UNDER MAINTENANCE on Wednesday, September 21, 2011 | 7:53 AM


The Devil on the Door

Could a painting on a dope dealer’s storefront be the last work of Jean-Michel Basquiat?


ARTICLE BY LIZA  GHORBANI | PHOTOGRAPH BY JAMES VAN DER ZEE

On a Saturday morning in the early summer of 1988, Jean-Michel Basquiat stepped through the doorway of a bodega on South 4th Street in Williamsburg. It was a tough neighborhood back then, before the condos and restaurants arrived, and the store was a drug front. Basquiat had been hitting it up every couple of days, likely because his Manhattan source had dried up. Word on the street was that if you knew where to go, the drugs were better in Brooklyn, and rock stars and other wealthier users were starting to make the quick trip over the bridge.

Nobody there knew who Basquiat was, but, at 27, he was as famous as he’d ever be during his lifetime. His paintings had reached a then-astronomical $50,000 apiece. The Whitney and MoMA had showed him. Celebrities like Paul Simon had bought his work. In person, though, he looked ragged. He was skinny and had open sores and swollen pimples on his face. He had about $300 in his hand, and he spoke softly when he asked for his usual: "Two bundles," or twenty bags. The first few times, he’d sniffed the goods. When he’d introduced himself as "Michel," the dealer told him he’d get his ass kicked with a girl’s name and said he’d call him "Mike."

As he became a regular, he’d hang around and smoke a joint with the workers in the little backyard -- though the dealer, then just 18, remembers not wanting to "share saliva" because he looked so far gone. On this day, "Mike" eyed some cans of paint lying around the storefront and asked if he might do something on the steel front door. "Do whatever you want," the dealer said. "Just make sure you lock the door when you leave." Basquiat rather quickly painted a lone figure with devil’s horns on the door and then left. "Mike" would return a few more times that summer, then disappear for a couple of months, and then come back one last time near the end of the summer, buying significantly less than usual.

On August 12, 1988, Jean-Michel Basquiat was found dead in his loft on Great Jones Street in Manhattan, overdosed on heroin. He’d just returned from Maui, where he’d gone cold turkey, and most of his friends believed that he (like many relapsing addicts) had lost his tolerance, turning his customary dose lethal.

The door remained on the Brooklyn storefront, and passersby now and then offered the owner money for it --once $4,000, another time $7,000 -- to his confusion. Eventually, around 1999, someone showed him a photograph of Basquiat in an art book. "I seen his picture, I said, Yeah, I used to sell heroin to this guy," he remembers. "I said, This is fuckin’ Mike." He removed the door and put it in storage.

That’s the story, anyway. It comes from the former dealer, who will go only by his first name, Alex, fearing implications in the artist’s death.

Click here to continue reading "The Devil on the Door"


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HOT LINKS: August 15, 2011

Written By UNDER MAINTENANCE on Monday, August 15, 2011 | 10:20 AM

Online items that captured the attention of BlackArtistNews over the past few days:




Patricia Hollins (l) poses with artist Billy Newton and his work. Newton's solo exhibit Black Gold is on display from August 8 - September 8, 2011 at the Multicultural Center in Marlin, TX.
Photo by Kyla Ybarra for The Marlin Democrat.

(The Atlanta Post)



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AUCTION: Jean-Michel Basquiat / Self Portrait / Phillips de Pury & Company (London) / June 27, 2011

Written By UNDER MAINTENANCE on Friday, July 1, 2011 | 4:12 AM


JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT
Self-Portrait, 1985
Acrylic, oil stick, crown cork and bottle caps on wood.  
142 × 153 × 15 cm (55 7/8 × 60 1/4 × 5 7/8 in). 
ESTIMATED VALUE: £2,000,000-3,000,000
SOLD FOR: £2,057,250 or $3,246,690.00 USD

PROVENANCE: Private Collection, London

EXHIBITED: Fire Under the Ashes (from Picasso to Basquiat): Valencia, Instituto Valenciano de Arte Moderno, 5 May – 28 August 2005; Paris, Musée Maillol-Fondation Dina Vierny, 8 October 2005 – 14 February 2006

LITERATURE: E. Navarra, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Paris, 2000, vol. II, no. 10, p. 230 (illustrated in colour)

Links:



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CLIP ART: Jean Michel-Basquiat / Andy Warhol / Magazine Ad for Indochine Restaurant

Written By UNDER MAINTENANCE on Tuesday, May 17, 2011 | 10:01 PM

This ad for NYC restaurant Indochine was clipped from the April 2011 issue of Interview magazine. Illustration by Jean-Philippe Delhomme.
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GENESIS: Jean-Michel Basquiat / December 22, 1960

Written By UNDER MAINTENANCE on Wednesday, December 22, 2010 | 12:01 AM

Jean-Michel Basquiat, Self Portrait (Plaid), 1983, Sammlung Thaddaeus Ropac, Salzburg © The Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat / VBK, Wien, 2010
"He was one of the few people I was truly envious of." ~ Madonna


Jean-Michel Basquiat online


MORE Jean-Michel Basquiat on BlackArtistNews
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DVD: Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radiant Child / A Film by Tamra Davis

Written By UNDER MAINTENANCE on Thursday, November 11, 2010 | 9:26 PM


Product Description (from ArtHouseFilmsonline.com):

In his short career, Jean-Michel Basquiat was a phenomenon. He became notorious for his graffiti art under the moniker Samo in the late 1970s on the Lower East Side scene, sold his first painting to Deborah Harry for $200 and became best friends with Andy Warhol. Appreciated by both the art cognoscenti and the public, Basquiat was launched into international stardom. However, soon his cult status began to override the art that had made him famous in the first place.


Director Tamra Davis pays homage to her friend in this definitive documentary, but also delves into Basquiat as an iconoclast. His dense, bebop-influenced neoexpressionist work emerged while minimalist, conceptual art was the fad; as a successful black artist, he was constantly confronted by racism and misconceptions. Much can be gleaned from insider interviews and archival footage, but it is Basquiat's own words and work that powerfully convey the mystique and allure of both the artist and the man.


Featuring interviews with Julian Schnabel, Larry Gagosian, Bruno Bischofberger, Tony Shafrazi, Fab 5 Freddy, Jeffrey Deitch, Glenn O'Brien, Maripol, Kai Eric, Nicholas Taylor, Fred Hoffmann, Michael Holman, Diego Cortez, Annina Nosei, Suzanne Mallouk, and Rene Ricard, among many others.

Theatrical Trailer:



Technical:
English dialogue, 93 minutes, color, not rated
Camera (color, DV), Tamra Davis, David Koh, Harry Geller; editor, Alexis Manya Spraic; music, J. Ralph, Adam Horowitz, Mike Diamond; sound (stereo).

Special features:
Uncut interview with Filmmaker Tamra Davis; Theatrical Trailer

Purchase:
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