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Published on the occasion of the exhibition, Jean-Michel Basquiat:
Art and Objecthood, at Nahmad Contemporary, this book will
illuminate the role of found objects and unconventional materials
in the Jean- Michel Basquiat's oeuvre. Basquiat, whose artistic
practice has profoundly impacted audiences on an international
scale, used objects and media from his environs to proliferate
messages of social justice and change. Featuring a breadth of works
that the artist made using unconventional painted supports and
found-object sculptures, this publication will provide an
innovative, in-depth look into the artist's sculptural practice. In
addition to painting and drawing on items within his domestic
spaces-refrigerators, chairs, and cabinets-Basquiat also left his
mark on items he encountered on the street-discarded windows and
doors, mirrors, wood boards, and subway tiles. The publication will
present new scholarship by leading Basquiat academics and art
historians that will explore Basquiat's use of found objects and
materials and their role in addressing issues of social inequality
and the politics of race in the United States.
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Basquiat: The Modena Paintings
Sam Keller, Iris Hasler; Text written by Dieter Buchhart; Designed by Christoph Steinegger
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R835
Discovery Miles 8 350
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Show that never Was Numerous publications and exhibitions have
examined Jean-Michel Basquiat's extensive oeuvre that consists of
more than 3000 works, this catalogue though focuses on eight
paintings only: In the summer of 1982, Basquiat traveled to Modena,
Italy, for one of his first solo exhibitions in Europe at the
gallery of Emilio Mazzoli. Within just a few days, he painted a
group of large-format paintings that surpassed his previous work
not only in terms of their scale. Each at least two by four meters
in size, they mark the transition from graffiti spraying in the
streets of Manhattan to painting on canvas. At the same time, they
reflect an artist coming into his own. The paintings - including
masterpieces that today are considered pivotal and among the most
outstanding of his oeuvre - have never been shown together. This
catalogue revisits this crucial moment of Basquiat's career some 40
years ago and reunites them for the first time.
During the late 1970s and early 1980s, New York City was
financially and socially bankrupt, but the art and music scene was
flourishing. During these years, the downtown New York music scene
– no wave, hip-hop, disco funk and club culture – shaped
Jean-Michel Basquiat as both a musician and an artist. This
catalogue for a travelling exhibition explores how Basquiat’s
painting has parallels in his music (sampling, cut-up, rapping),
and takes a new look at his production as a writer and a poet in
light of his connections with the then-emerging hip-hop culture.
This beautifully illustrated exhibition catalogue of rarely seen
photographs and images sheds new light on Basquiat as a musician,
exploring how his art and music are related, and how they reflect
on his identity as a Black artist in the United States, the
downtown New York music scene, and contemporary culture.
An exploration of the personal and artistic connections between two
icons of twentieth-century art Keith Haring (1958-1990) and
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-1988) changed the art world of the 1980s
through their idiosyncratic imagery, radical ideas, and complex
sociopolitical commentary. Each artist invented a distinct visual
language, employing signs, symbols, and words to convey strong
messages in unconventional ways, and each left an indelible legacy
that remains a force in contemporary visual and popular culture.
Offering fascinating new insights into the artists' work, Keith
Haring | Jean-Michel Basquiat reveals the many intersections among
Haring and Basquiat's lives, ideas, and practices. This lavishly
illustrated volume brings together more than two hundred
images-works created in public spaces, paintings, sculptures,
objects, works on paper, photographs, and more. These rich visuals
are accompanied by essays and interviews from renowned scholars,
artists, and art critics, exploring the reach and range of Haring
and Basquiat's influence. Keith Haring | Jean-Michel Basquiat
provides a valuable look at two artistic peers and boundary
breakers whose tragically short but prolific careers left their
marks on the art world and beyond. Distributed for the National
Gallery of Victoria in association with No More Rulers
The artist’s most inspired works in one volume. Jean-Michel
Basquiat—artist and art world provocateur—took New York City by
storm with his powerful and complex works that relentlessly engaged
with charged sociopolitical issues, including race, police
brutality, and structural inequity. In this important volume,
devoted to an exhibition at the Brant Foundation in their newly
opened Manhattan outpost featuring the artist’s key works,
Basquiat’s art returns to its East Village roots, contextualized
for the first time in decades in the very neighborhood that served
as one of his greatest inspirations. Dieter Buchhart, noted
Basquiat scholar and curator, brings together one hundred of the
artist’s most important works, focusing on the best examples of
the many subjects that informed Basquiat’s work, from jazz,
anatomy, sports figures, comics, classical literature, the African
diaspora, and art history. The exhibition partially restages three
of the artist’s critical early shows, including an exhibition of
the artist’s paintings and drawings of heads at Robert Miller
Gallery; his most important canvases from Gagosian Gallery’s 1982
show in Los Angeles; and Basquiat’s solo show at Fun Gallery in
the East Village. Buchhart also considers in-depth the artist’s
so-called stretcher bar paintings, in which the normally hidden
wooden supports for stretched canvases are exposed, works that have
yet to be explored at length by scholars. In so doing, Buchhart
offers a critical assessment of the enduring importance and legacy
of the artist’s work. © Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat. Licensed
by Artestar, New York.
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Munch in Dialogue (Hardcover)
Klaus Albrecht Schroder, Dieter Buchhart, Antonia Hoerschelmann; Contributions by Dieter Buchhart, Richard Shiff
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R1,007
Discovery Miles 10 070
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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While Munch's pessimistic, melancholy world view crucially defines
our understanding of his work, many important postwar and
contemporary artists have drawn inspiration from several aspects of
his oeuvre. This richly illustrated book explores how seven such
artists- Georg Baselitz, Miriam Cahn, Peter Doig, Marlene Dumas,
Tracey Emin, Jasper Johns and Andy Warhol-engaged with Munch's work
at different points in, or throughout, their careers. It features
elaborate reproductions of sixty works by Munch juxtaposed with
those inspired by him. Readers discover how Baselitz cunningly pays
tribute to his artistic hero how Tracey Emin's practice, like
Munch's, is autobiographical, both drawing from their personal
torment to create their unnerving works ; how Marlene Dumas was
drawn to the expressiveness of Munch's portraits; and how Peter
Doig draws on Munch's radical treatment of pigments and
materiality. Essays by leading scholars detail each artist's unique
preoccupation with Munch and offer a focused exploration of the
ways women artists in particular were inspired by his examinations
of loneliness, fear, and trauma.
The publication presents an overview of the artist's works from the
end of the 1990s onward and reflects on the meaning of chance, play
and research in Brudermann's work, as emphasized by the letters,
playing cards and business cards that are inserted between the
pages of the book.
The first African-American artist to attain art superstardom,
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-1988) created a huge oeuvre of drawings
and paintings (Julian Schnabel recalls him once accidentally
leaving a portfolio of about 2,000 drawings on a subway car) in the
space of just eight years. Through his street roots in graffiti,
Basquiat helped to establish new possibilities for figurative and
expressionistic painting, breaking the white male stranglehold of
Conceptual and Minimal art, and foreshadowing, among other
tendencies, Germany's" Junge Wilde" movement. It was not only
Basquiat's art but also the details of his biography that made his
name legendary--his early years as "Samo" (his graffiti artist
moniker), his friendships with Andy Warhol, Keith Haring and
Madonna and his tragically early death from a heroin overdose. This
superbly produced retrospective publication assesses Basquiat's
luminous career with commentary by, among others, Glenn O'Brien,
and 160 color reproductions of the work.
Jean-Michel Basquiat was born in Brooklyn, New York, to a Puerto
Rican mother and a Haitian father--an ethnic mix that meant young
Jean-Michel was fluent in French, Spanish and English by the age of
11. In 1977, at the age of 17, Basquiat took up graffiti,
inscribing the landscape of downtown Manhattan with his signature
"Samo." In 1980 he was included in the landmark group exhibition
"The Times Square Show"; the following year, at the age of 21,
Basquiat became the youngest artist ever to be invited to
Documenta. By 1982, Basquiat had befriended Andy Warhol, later
collaborating with him; Basquiat was much affected by Warhol's
death in 1987. He died of a heroin overdose on August 22, 1988, at
the age of 27.
In 2018 the Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris, is hosting exhibitons
on two of the greatest artists of the 20th century - Egon Schiele,
and Jean-Michel Basquiat. Both exhibitions have the same curator,
and are taking place at the same time. The shows illustrate exactly
what it is that linked the two artists: line, and the use of
expressive force.This, the catalogue of the Basquiat exhibition,
labelled "the definitive exhibition" by its curator, brings
together 120 of the artist's most important masterpieces, sourced
from interational museums and private collections. With the
astonishing radicalness of his artistic practice, Basquiat renewed
the concept of art with enduring impact. This Basquiat
retrospective centres on the idea of Basquiat's unique energetic
line, his use of words, symbols, and how he integrates collage in
his paintings, sculptures, objects, and large-scale drawings.The
catalogue includes texts by great authors, including Paul Schimmel
who tells of his meeting with Basquiat in California; Francesco
Pellizi who knew Basquiat well and has not written about him for a
long time; and Okwui Enwezor who talks about the Afro American
identity.
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Schwitters Miro Arp (Hardcover)
Dieter Buchhart; Contributions by William Jeffett, Eric Robertson, Gwendolen Webster
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R1,367
R970
Discovery Miles 9 700
Save R397 (29%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The first book to explore the mutual influence of the
groundbreaking modernists Kurt Schwitters, Joan Miro, and Hans Arp.
Featuring approximately 100 key works, along with numerous
reference images, this book explores the work of Kurt Schwitters,
Joan Miro, and Hans Arp and the ways in which the artists
influenced each others' artistic pursuits. It examines the artists'
shared commitment to geometric forms over natural ones and their
individual strategies for fusing painting and sculpture to mine the
depths of assemblage. United by an impulse to renew and transform
art, to "assassinate" painting, Schwitters, Miro, and Arp
experimented with collage and assemblage in order to build on the
achievements of Cubism and break with prior traditions. Not only
did their work resonate within their own artistic circles, but it
continues to inspire subsequent generations to this day.
Jean-Michel Basquiat's symbolic, complex, and often emotionally
charged work made a huge impact on the 1980s downtown New York City
art scene. And though his all-too-brief career ended when he died
at age 27, Basquiat left behind an enormous legacy-not only in the
number of works he produced, but also in the messages he encoded
around political, social, racial, and cultural issues. This
exciting book shows how Basquiat used an intricate network of signs
and symbols to challenge the very system that made him a darling of
the art world. It traces his inspiration from cartoons, children's
drawings, and advertising as well as his own Haitian and Puerto
Rican heritage; discusses the influence of African-American,
African, and Aztec cultural histories; and shows how Basquiat
incorporated into his work classical themes and contemporary
icons-from athletes to musicians. What becomes clear is how, even
as a young man, Basquiat had a profound understanding of the
artist's role in art history, and of his position as a young Black
artist in a world of racism, suppression and social injustice. This
book helps readers decode Basquiat's unique lingua franca, an
intoxicating body of work brimming with social commentary that was
in turns incisive, angry, comic, hip, and heartbreaking, and that
remains powerful and meaningful today.
Hermann Nitsch, born in Vienna in 1938, is a co-founder of Viennese
Actionism, and one of the international pioneers of the Performance
Art Movement. This Austrian universal artist's world-famous
painting actions have made a major contribution to the development
of art post 1945. More than 90 of these painting actions have been
staged thus far, the most recent were held at the Bayreuth Festival
in the summer of 2021 to accompany a new production of the opera
The Valkyrie. Nitsch's 20th painting action took place at the
Vienna Secession in 1987 and is the only instance in which the
artist's action works have remained fully available. This is
probably Nitsch's most important integrated work of this kind. It
symbolises his extraordinary artistic development and constitutes
an unrepeatable contemporary document which exudes an international
radiance.
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R383
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Discovery Miles 3 100
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