Jean-Michel Basquiat Head Imagery

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Jean-Michel Basquiat Head Imagery 2019 INTRODUCTION Shortly after Jean-Michel Basquiat took up residency at Larry Gagosian’s Venice Beach townhouse/ gallery in November 1982, for the purpose of preparing his second exhibition in Los Angeles, Larry contacted me on behalf of Jean-Michel, asking if I would meet with the artist to discuss the production of a silkscreen project the artist wanted to produce. I met with Jean-Michel in his new Venice studio in November 1982, at which time we began our work on Tuxedo, an ambitious 8 x 5 foot silkscreen on canvas, which would be the first of six silk screen editions I produced with him. I regularly visited Basquiat in his Venice studio. While my primary purpose was to work with him on the silkscreen projects, I was equally drawn to watching him at work. The studio was essentially a gallery space Larry Gagosian had built as the ground floor of his new home on Market Street in Venice. It was about 1500 square feet, with a ten foot high ceiling and four clean white walls. In the middle were a few rolling tables covered with paints, brushes, oil paint sticks, pencils, drawings, color photocopies, magazines, books, and newspapers. These tables soon became cluttered with a vast array of various working materials, all of which the artist would use to make his paintings. In one corner there was a mattress on the floor, next to it a boom box and piles of cds. This was the one place in the studio where I could hang out--- removed, able to observe, even talk to Jean-Michel and, at the same time, stay out of his way. Basquiat often got to work in the early afternoon, then worked late into the night. On the walls there were paintings in various states of completion, some with only a move or two, others labored over with multiple layers of paint, imagery, text, collaged drawings and photocopies. There was no one way he developed a canvas. Some started with the application of abstract passages of paint, others with an image or collaged text drawing. In most cases Basquiat would lay down a body of “content” and then obliterate a good portion of it, leaving only a fragment of the original. Whatever approach he chose, Basquiat worked at a breakneck pace, constantly in motion, going from paint, images and texts on one canvas to starting another. Watching Jean-Michel Basquiat at work was one of my greatest experiences in the art world. His strategies, intuition, fluidity and talent were unique for his time. During my time with Jean-Michel Basquiat in Venice in 1982-1984, he often confided in me about his creative expression and his career. It was therefore appropriate when British curator Mark Francis reached out to me in late 1983 to put him in contact with the artist to present his work at the Fruitmarket Gallery in Edinburgh. This would become Jean-Michel Basquiat’s first museum exhibition. Prior to this, Basquiat’s work had been recognized in one person exhibitions in

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