Basquiat
Essay by review • April 6, 2011 • Essay • 3,253 Words (14 Pages) • 3,195 Views
In his essay, Royalty, Heroism, and the Streets: The Art of Jean-Michel Basquiat, Robert Farris Thompson recounts the story of the first time he was able to watch Basquiat at work. It was in February 1985. Just before Basquiat began painting, he did something rather interesting, as Farris Thompson notesÐ'...
"Basquiat activated an LP of free, Afro-Cuban, and other kinds of jazz. Then he resumed work on an unfinished collage. Hard bop sounded. Jean-Michel pasted on letters and crocodiles. He did this with a riffing insistence, matching the music. Digits in shifting sequences, 2 2 2 2, 4 4 4, 5 5 5 5, further musicalized the canvasÐ'...He continued to work. Four styles of jazz Ð'- free, mambo-inflected, hard bop, and, at the end, fabulous early bop with sudden stops Ð'- accompanied the making of that collage."
Towards the end of the 1970s, Jean-Michel Basquiat whose nom de plume at that time was SAMO was producing graffiti on street walls around Brooklyn, New York. It was a slightly different style of graffiti compared to that of the graffiti that clothed the New York subway trains. Rather than simply writing SAMO (which meant Ð''Same Old Shit') he included slogans which were implicitly political and drawings that were primitive in style yet complex in meaning. It wasn't long before Basquiat gained recognition for his unusual style of art.
Just as music was an essential part of the subway graffiti art scene, music was a fundamental contributor to the art produced by Basquait. It was the exhilarating, frenetic improvised jazz sounds of the 1940s and 50s, with the likes of Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, among other be-bop musicians that inspired him.
Jazz has roots embedded in the African American lifestyle, and it was the lifestyle of the jazz musicians that Basquiat identified with. It was a constitutive part of Basquiat's work, as Farris Thompson states "understanding the art of Jean-Michel depends in part on understanding his lifelong involvement with music Ð'- literally his working ambient. Jazz and blues are prominent, consciously chosen Afro-Atlantic roots." Particular jazz musicians Basquiat idolised were Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, Max Roach, but most prominently Charlie Parker. In her book Basquiat: A Quick Killing in Art, Phoebe Hoban draws upon numerous comparisons between Basquiat and Parker: they both left home at fifteen, both were terminal junkies and sex addicts, both became acquainted with the latest artistic trend of the time, thus both becoming famous by the age of twenty-one and both were intelligent yet "self-conscious bad boys." From this evidence it is clear why Basquiat had such empathy with Parker and why he saw himself as "art's answer toÐ'...Charlie Parker."
It is with the influence of Parker and jazz on Basquiat's art that we can observe the improvisation in his work "grounded in a knowing assimilation of the past." And it is with Parker that I want to explore Basquiat's art to see how he used Parker's music and his legacy to create the masterpieces: Charles the First (1982), Horn Players (1983), CPRKR (1982), and Zydeco (1984). I have chosen works from 1982, 1983 and 1984 as that was when "all hell broke loose" and when he really started to introduce themes of jazz into his oeuvre.
Charles the First, painted in 1982 is seen as a pivotal piece as it was the first time Basquiat had tried to bring back the memory of Charlie Parker. The title of the piece, like so many of his titles, draws for further examination. He once said in an interview with Henry Geldzahler that the subject of his art was "royalty, heroism and the streets;" in the title of this piece,Ð''Charles' refers to Charlie Parker, but Ð''the First' puts Parker into a position of royal status. It has a comical element to it, but at the same time it reveals Basquiat's adoration for the musician.
Basquiat experimented vastly with the frames of his paintings and the material he painted onto. Charles the First is no exception; painted on three panels, it is a triptych, which separates the piece into three sections. Robert O'Meally notes that "some visual artists divide their work into sections that approximate the structures of jazz: the A section swinging into the B section and back into A." Like a piece of music, each section of Charles the First says something different but remains constant in its theme, using the same colours, repeating the letter Ð''S' and his trademark crown, which he used not only as a trademark but "as a symbol of respect and admiration that he bestows on the figures that represent his work."
Parker had the ability to play in two very contrasting styles; Marshall W. Stearns describes it as playing "hot" and "cold." Basquait parallels this Ð''contrasting' technique by using a cool, aquamarine blue against a hot, desert-sand yellow.
Charles the First has a "rhythmlessness" that much of Parker's music has, for example, in the tune Ð''Be Bop', Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker enter the music in a corybantic fashion, having little respect for the beat; jumping in front of it, playing just after it. The beat is always there but Gillespie and Parker's improvisations aren't constrained by it in anyway which gives the piece a free-form, rhythmless feeling. Much is the same in Charles the First; Basquiat keeps the beat with the blocks of yellow, blue and back, but then almost disregards it by writing words and painting long blue lines, short red lines, scratches of orange and black in a cacophonic fashion which percolates this sense of rhythmlessness.
Basquiat paints Parker's hands, one with a crown above it, the other connected to the letter Ð''S' (representing Superman). This exemplifies his reverence towards Parker as he is saying that Parker has the "touch of a king, with the grasp of a superhero."
Between 1982 and 1985, Basquiat's style shifted from his obsession with mortality and imagery relating to the streets, to a new found identity with his black and Hispanic ancestry. He began to produce multipanel paintings, which he would coat with words, much to the annoyance of his collectors who "equated the work with graffiti, which was carefully obsoleted to a fad by the status quo." He focused
on numerous black figures, not just the be-bop jazz musicians he so looked up to, but often boxers, such as Cassius Clay, Joe Louis, Sugar Ray Robinson and Jack Johnson as well. It was the first time in his career that he was explicitly celebrating the role
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