Basquiat
By (Author) Leonhard Emmerling
Taschen GmbH
Taschen GmbH
18th November 2015
12th March 2021
Germany
General
Non Fiction
Individual artists, art monographs
Drawing and drawings
Other graphic or visual art forms
759.13
Hardback
96
Width 210mm, Height 260mm, Spine 14mm
614g
An icon of 1980s New York, Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-1988) first made his name under the graffiti tag "SAMO", before establishing his studio practice and catapulting to fast fame at the age of 20. Although his career lasted barely a decade, he remains a cult figure of artistic social commentary, and a trailblazer in the mediation of graffiti and gallery art.
Basquiat's work drew upon diverse sources and media to create an original and urgent artistic vocabulary, biting with critique against structures of power and racism. His practice merged abstraction and figuration, poetry and painting, while his influences spanned Greek, Roman, and African art, French poetry, jazz, and the work of artistic contemporaries such as Andy Warhol and Cy Twombly. The results are vivid, visceral mixtures of words, African emblems, cartoonish figures, daubs of bold color, and beyond.
This book presents Basquiat's short but prolific career, his unique style, and his profound engagement with ever-relevant issues of integration and segregation, poverty and wealth.
Leonhard Emmerling received his doctorate from the University of Heidelberg for a thesis titled "Jean Dubuffets Art Theory." He is head of the South Asia regional program at the Goethe-Institute in New Delhi and was previously active as a curator at various art institutions in Germany. His publications include TASCHENs Jean-Michel Basquiat and Jackson Pollock.