Sunday, March 30, 2014

Basquiat X Andy Warhol by Traver Dodorye

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Jean-Michel Basquiat was born on the 22nd of December in 1960 in Brooklyn, New York and died on the 12th of August in 1988 of a drug overdose in his Manhattan studio. His death, like a rock star, helped to make Jean-Michel Basquiat a legend, but only because he had already reached unquestionable fame through his work as a graffiti artist and an innovative painter. In addition to his tragic death, he is most known for his loose and unencumbered painterly graphic style so often associated with street art that started to gain such notoriety in the 1980s. As well, his subject matter provocatively positioned and layered imagery, iconography and text that addressed issues of race, culture and heritage.
Born to a Haitian father, Gerard Basquiat, and a Puerto Rican mother, Matilde Andrades, Jean-Michel Basquiat’s heritage would prove to be a pivotal influence in his work as an artist. He was the oldest of three children; his siblings were both girls, Lisane and Jeanine, four and seven years younger than he, respectively. He was considered an extremely bright and gifted young boy; he learned how to read and write by the age of four (in general), and was reading, writing and speaking English, French and Spanish by the age of eleven. His artistic ability was recognized at quite a young age by his mother and his teachers and was greatly encouraged. His mother would take him into Manhattan to see art and enrolled him as a junior member of the Brooklyn Museum of Art and thus he was exposed to various artistic disciplines and practices very early on.
When he was just eight years old he was hit by a car, which proved to be quite traumatic as he endured many internal injuries and had to stay in the hospital for a full month. His mother brought him the infamous drawing book, Grey’s Anatomy, which kept him thoroughly occupied during his recovery. Sadly, not too long after his recovery his parents separated and his mother would be in and out of mental institutions. Jean-Michel Basquiat, along with his sisters, were raised by their father. They remained in Brooklyn until 1974/75 when the family moved to Puerto Rico for a short time. At this time, Jean-Michel Basquiat made his first attempt at running away, but was rather immediately picked up by the police and returned home.
He attended the progressive City as School program that centered very much on culture. He was intrigued by comics and cartoon drawing as well as graffiti and along with a few school friends, Al Diaz and Shannon Dawson, first developed the character cum tag SAMO while still in high school. He never graduated, as the story goes, Jean-Michel Basquiat was pushing the envelope at school and during a school event he apparently threw a pie in the face of the principle and ran out. He soon then ran away from home again, this time remaining on the streets or “couch-surfing” at friends for a couple years. During these next couple years Jean-Michel Basquiat and friends would take SAMO public, tagging throughout the city images and poetic texts that were more often sarcastic and humorous – and political.
There are varying stories about the development of SAMO; apparently, the acronym originally became a stand-in for the turn of phrase “same old shit”, which is how they referred to the marijuana they smoked. SAMO became a character in a comic book that Jean-Michel Basquiat created in which SAMO sold a false religion. SAMO also showed up in one of their theatre classes called the Family Life. Soon photocopies were being made and passed around to “sell” the false religion. SAMO also started showing up as graffiti on subway walls and buildings in SoHo and the East Village, particularly around the School of Visual Arts. The tag now included the infamous and ironic copyright symbol “©” and was clearly targeting the art audience in more ways than one.
SAMO©… 4 THE SO-CALLED AVANT-GARDE
SAMO as an alternative 2 playing art with the radical chic sect on Daddy’s$funds
Yet, it was not only in response to the art world, but the world at large (and many will say that it was Al Diaz who was more interested in the latter and Jean-Michel Basquiat in the former). SAMO© played with and provoked issues of consumerism and pop culture, advertising, marketing, memory, history, etc. as in one of their tags that came across as a survey playing with their own notoriety:
WHICH OF THE FOLLOWING IS OMNIPRESENT?
[ ] LEE HARVEY OSWALD
[ ] COCA-COLA LOGO
[ ] GENREAL MELONRY
[ ] SAMO©
SAMO© had become infamous to the area by now and was written up in the SoHo News and the Village Voice. Soon to be famous students, Keith Haring and Kenny Scharf, became fans and began to take their art to the streets. Ironically, it is perhaps this exchange that helped to facilitate Jean-Michel Basquiat’s transition from the walls of the street to the canvas and the white walls of the gallery. It is said that Al Diaz was more committed to graffiti and anonymity while Jean-Michel Basquiat was more committed to “art” and publicity. During this period of transition of SAMO©, around 1980, Jean-Michel Basquiat started tagging more on his own and started drawing and painting on paper and canvas. Soon it would be seen throughout the streets of New York that SAMO© was dead; Jean-Michel Basquiat and Al Diaz apparently had a falling out and the former started tagging over SAMO© tags, “SAMO© IS DEAD” yet began to incorporate it in his more ‘proper’ art work with one of his first solo shows even publicized as being authored by SAMO©.
While some of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s early work shared similarities with SAMO©, and some were even signed SAMO© (sometimes then crossed out as in Cadillac Moon), his work changed quite a bit. He retained some qualities of his “graffiti style” but developed a more heavy-handed and ‘painterly’ style. The young emerging artist continued to play with popular culture and iconography (in that “pop” sense), and as his career as a painter developed he began to investigate collage and montage styles, imagery from heritage and tradition as well as themes and subjects that addressed his heritage and a new tradition.
During this development from street artist to gallery artist, Jean-Michel Basquiat experienced a kind of popularity and fame that was peculiar to such young artists in the visual arts. To be sure, it certainly wasn’t unwarranted in that the precocious young artist had quite deliberately targeted it. He met the ‘on the scene’ New Yorker, Glenn O’Brien, who became a pivotal figure for Jean-Michel Basquiat in the downtown scene. The artist appeared on his show, TV Party, in 1979 and would repeatedly make appearances over the next few years. He also starred in Glenn O’Brien’s independent film New York Beat, later re-titled, Downtown 81 (2001), as an unlucky painter hanging out in the downtown music scene.
Jean-Michel Basquiat was becoming one of “the” downtown artists of many capacities. He, along with Shannon Dawson, started an art noise band called Gray, which also included Wayne Clifford, Michael Holman and Nick Taylor. They formed in 1979 and started performing in all of the important downtown clubs such as CBGBs, the Mudd Club, Max’s Kansas City and Hurrah. Jean-Michel Basquiat participated in the infamous the Times Square Show in 1980 produced by COLAB (Collaborative Projects Incorporated) and Fashion Moda in which critics singled out his work. He was then included in the pointed exhibition, New York/New Wave at the contemporary art venue in Queens, P.S. 1 (now a subsidiary of MOMA).
Annina Nosei took a great interest in the ingénue and invited him into her gallery in the heart of SoHo, the then center of the contemporary art world, giving him a studio in its basement. He first exhibited figurative works in a group show held at the gallery in 1981, Public Address, and had his first solo exhibition at the gallery the following year, which received rave reviews. A few months later, Jean-Michel Basquiat showed his work at the East Village alternative space known as the “Fun Gallery,” which was considered a great show yet a great affront to his new dealer and the established, and growing, art market. But such behavior didn’t matter as much as it did matter; Jean-Michel Basquiat was already a star and “The Radiant Child,” was published a month later in the December 1982 issue of Artforum magazine by Rene Ricard.
Jean-Michel Basquiat went to Los Angeles to prepare for a show at the premiere Gagosian gallery and while there worked with Rammellzee producing the album, Beat Bop. He is included in the 1983 Whitney Biennial and moves into the Great Jones Street studio loft that he rents from Andy Warhol. The following year he showed a varied group of small works at the Mary Boone Gallery, which were received with mixed reviews. He then begins a series of collaborations with Andy Warhol and the two become close friends producing work for Bruno Bischofberger in Europe and an exhibition in New York at the Tony Sharfrazi gallery that was panned by the critics.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Philippe Pasqua, l’insaisissable by Dodorye








Through his extraordinary journey, Philippe Pasqua has emerged as one of the major artists of his generation.
From the beginning, his art made a great impression and challenged the certainties of those who rubbed shoulders with him, like the great critic Pierre Restany.

With Pasqua, the taste for the monumental goes hand in hand with an attraction towards what is most vulnerable – bodies and faces, sometimes with stigmatising differences that the artist adopts and magnifies through his painting: for example, portraits of transsexuals, people with Downs syndrome, or people who are blind.
Handicaps, differences, obscenity or the sacred: each canvas is the fruit of a struggle, a tension between what can be shown and “tolerated”, and what is socially repressed or concealed.

Pasqua’s painting strikes the visitor like an almost physical impact, but also like a vision that is at the same time explosive and incisive. The monumental format of the artist’s canvases is dictated by the breadth of his gestures — a dance where brutality and finesse, trance and lucidity alternate.
He begins by painting the sort of fetishes or enigmatic silhouettes that evoke voodoo. Then, gradually, his gaze turns to those who are standing around him. He interferes with the twists and turns of people’s intimate depths, going right into the innermost areas of their being.

As a counterpoint to this physical work, there are his grand drawings. The face or the body becomes a halo, mist, smoke, stroke, vibration. It is no longer so much a case of flesh as of sketched contours and delicate textures.

Photograph of Kanye West and Family Is Art at its Finest

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Graffiti as Expression

Student debt is affecting students all over the country. Some students are graduating their universities with over $60,000 in debt. This leaves students with a huge wake up call when they graduate and owe more money then they have ever seen. The government needs to be aware of how many students are struggling with this debt. Many people have turned to video advertising, online advertising, and art. One form of art that our group has been drawn too is graffiti art.





Graffiti art is everywhere. You pass by it on your way to class, while your driving under a bridge, or on the side of some building while traveling on the highway. These artists have something to say and make a lot of noise with there graffiti expressions. Graffiti has been used as another way for the public to hear these students cry for help. Everyone deserves the same opportunity when it comes to a college degree. We are in a State School here at Umass and to graduate with such significant debt should not be possible. Our voices need to be heard.



Art can be described in so many different ways. Politics, economics, and culture can all be described through art. Art is so much more then a small drawing or a scribble on a wall. Each piece of art tells a story about the artist. Graffiti is one of the most expressive types of art that makes a loud statement. Through powerful colors, pure talent, and unique placement graffiti is the type of art every type of person looks at.

Friday, March 21, 2014

Art Guru by Traver Dodorye



























Time will tell by Mr. Dodorye

                                                   "Time WiLl tElL" 
                 by Traver Dodorye 
               


Traver Dodorye is one of the most influential artist out of miami florida and is making his way up where he needs to be. The only thing about the journey is that Mr. Dodorye is learning so much but says the progress seems a little slower than usual. "The thing about the art industry is that it is hard to get recognition especially when you are not familiar to people." He is working on putting his name out as of right now and it focused on a really big project. That will set a big tone to his name.  Luxury things come to those who either bust there ass at an early age or have a golden spoon nothing in between point blank, but time will tell.

Wes Lang “The Studio” Exhibition @ ARoS Museum Preview




Known for his tattoo-inspired paintings and abstract sketches, Wes Lang is set to exhibit at Denmark’s ARoS museum in Aarhus. Titled “The Studio,” the retrospective show will present 60 works both old and new from Lang’s dynamic career thus far, including collaborations with Harley Davidson and Rolex alongside projects with iconic musicians like Kanye West and The Grateful Dead. “The Studio” will present itself as a recreation of Lang’s actual studio in Los Angeles and features many of his sketches, furnitures and quirky ornaments — transforming the space into Lang’s hub of creativity. “The Studio” will take place from March 29 to September 7, stay tuned for more information from ARoS.
ARoS Museum
Aros Allé 2
8000 Aarhus
Denmark

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

The Art of Jean-Michel Basquiat: Scarce, Costly and Coveted



The Art of Jean-Michel Basquiat: Scarce, Costly and Coveted



Cheim and Read’s recent exhibition of approximately 35 works on paper by Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-88), from Feb 17-March 26, consisted entirely of those on loan from the estate and private collectors, with nothing for sale. “We showed the work for the pleasure of it,” gallery director John Cheim told ARTnewsletter, adding that the gallery does



NEW YORK—Cheim and Read’s recent exhibition of approximately 35 works on paper by Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-88), from Feb 17-March 26, consisted entirely of those on loan from the estate and private collectors, with nothing for sale. “We showed the work for the pleasure of it,” gallery director John Cheim told ARTnewsletter, adding that the gallery does have in its inventory a work or two by Basquiat that are for sale, at asking prices of more than $1 million.
The Basquiat estate is not currently represented by any gallery, although the artist’s works were sold in the past through the Robert Miller Gallery. However, Cheim’s connection to the artist is already well-established, since he is currently a member of the Basquiat authentication committee along with Gerard Basquiat, the artist’s father, who controls the estate.
The estate has “not that much” material, consisting of works on paper and paintings, though some of the pieces are “great things,” Cheim says. Nonetheless, he reports, “there is a scarcity of great pieces for sale,” and most of the artist’s important work is currently in collections or available only on the secondary market. “There’s just little out there,” he adds, noting that when such items come up for sale, they are more likely to appear at auction than at galleries.
Prices for Basquiat’s drawings and paintings on paper range from $50,000/750,000, although most sales are in the $50,000/200,000 realm, says Cheim. The prices for paintings on canvas range from $800,000/5 million.
In contrast to some artists who came to prominence in the 1980s, Basquiat’s market has remained strong. Two major museums—the Brooklyn Museum of Art, New York, and the Museo d’Arte Moderna at Lugano, Switzerland—are holding retrospective exhibitions of Basquiat’s paintings and works on paper, continuing through June 5 and June 19, respectively.
The top auction price to date is the $5.5 million paid for a 1982 acrylic (spray paint) on canvas, Profit I, which was sold in 2002 at Christie’s and exceeded the $3/5 million estimate, followed by $4.6 million for another 1982 painting in acrylic and oil stick on canvas, Untitled (Two Heads on Gold), at Sotheby’s in 2003.

Monday, March 17, 2014

Antonio Brasko “BRANDALISM” @ The Seventh Letter Recap













A familiar name ’round these parts as catalyzed with our excursion to Portland last year, designer Antonio Brasko has continued on to host his own exhibition at The Seventh Letter Gallery in Los Angeles. The show, cleverly dubbed “BRANDALISM,” is an extension of the branded spray can project we’ve seen from Brasko in the past. The exhibit is the sum of oversized prints and can designs, all meant as a creative study on the parallels between graffiti and corporate branding. “BRANDALISM,” which opened on March 8, attracted a diverse crowd of attendees – perfectly fitting with the wide-ranging overtones of the show itself. Enjoy a brief recap above, and if in the Los Angeles area before March 22, be sure to stop by The Seventh Letter to experience the show in person.
The Seventh Letter
346 N. Fairfax Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90036
United States