I’m not a black artist, I am an artist by STEPHEN DALY

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STEPHEN DALY 20012670 5/13/21

I’m not a black artist, I am an artist. For the purpose of this essay, I shall be analysing the work of the late neo- expressionist artist Jean-Michel Basquiat whose work focused on the dichotomies of wealth versus power, racial issues of black versus white and inner versus outer experience. This essay will argue Basquiat’s nuanced subversion of white power structures within the art world versus the critical response to his work he faced at the time as “primitive”, unstudied and artistically immature. I shall be focusing on the 1983 painting, “Untitled” (History of the Black People) within my discussion.

Figure 1 1983 Untitled (History of the Black people). Acrylic & oil paint on panel. 172.5cm x 358cm

In the 1983 painting “Untitled” Basquiat places the history of Africa and African America in parallel.1 Whereas Basquiat’s difficult content would wane under the scrutiny of his critics being dismissed as “slapdash pictorial formulas” 2 , utilizing a richer retrospective understanding of Basquiat’s interests and style. I wish to deconstruct the images on these panels offering a deeper insight into the coded messages scattered throughout the painting, conflating the histories of both Africa and African America and showing the true studied intricacy of the artist’s content. Within “Untitled” Basquiat juxtaposes the Atlantic slave trade of the 16th to the 19th centuries with the ancient Egyptian slave trade3 whilst at the same time conflating the two. Throughout the painting are references of ancient Egypt but to enquire deeper into these symbols we find many double meanings of which I will discuss. In Spanish Basquiat has written “El Gran 1

Jordana Moore Saggese, Reading Basquiat: Exploring Ambivalence in American Art (The Regents of the University of California, 2014), p. 37. 2 Robert Hughes, ‘Requiem for a Featherweight’, The New Republic, 21 November 1988 <https://newrepublic.com/article/105858/hughes-basquiat-new-york-new-wave> [accessed 14 May 2021]. 3 Thomas Lewis, ‘Transatlantic Slave Trade’, Britannica.Com <https://www.britannica.com/topic/transatlanticslave-trade> [accessed 15 May 2021].

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