Basquiat soon acquired full awareness of his condition as artist. In his paintings appear elements that until then had remained on the fringes of art, but were closely linked with popular culture, like the pop world, comic book heroes, advertising images, prepared food packaging, icons of the consumer culture of those years.
Jean-Michel Basquiat is doubtlessly one of the most extraordinary phenomena in painting of the final years of the last century.
From the very outset the artist Basquiat - born in New York, but clearly of Afro-American descent - made his blackness grounds for diversity and for rebellion, not only in his renewal of expressive language, but also in turning into spectacle the stimuli offered by the modern city, using its spaces to shout out the anguish and existential confusion of an entire generation.
At first, the walls of buildings and subway stations became the open stage for this story, told rapidly, and almost covertly, through words and images inscribed using cans of spray paint.
The Perennial Shadow of Art in Basquiat’s Brief Life
Achille Bonito Oliva
Art: From Subways to SoHo, Jean-Michel Basquiat
Henry Geldzahler
Jean-Michel Basquiat: Speaking in Tongues
Richard D. Marshall
Word Hunger: Basquiat and Leonardo
Jeffrey Hoffeld
Jean-Michel Basquiat, Francesco Clemente and Andy Warhol: Collaborations
Bruno Bischofberger
Jean-Michel Basquiat. The Word and the Image
Luciano Caprile
Catalogue
by Luca Marenzi
Biography
by Gala Regazzoni
One-Man Exhibitions
Main Group Exhibitions
Selected Bibliography