Premium pages left without account:

Auction archive: Lot number 11

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Estimate
US$2,000,000 - US$3,000,000
Price realised:
US$3,610,000
Auction archive: Lot number 11

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Estimate
US$2,000,000 - US$3,000,000
Price realised:
US$3,610,000
Beschreibung:

PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF JEAN-MICHEL-BASQUIAT Jean-Michel-Basquiat Untitled acrylic and paper on canvas 66 x 60 in. (167.6 x 152.4 cm.) Executed circa 1984.
Provenance Acquired from the artist by the present owner Exhibited Abidjan, Ivory Coast, Centre Culturel Français, Jean-Michel-Basquiat, October 10 - November 7, 1986 Catalogue Essay Pulsating with raw unfiltered energy, Jean Michel Basquiat’s vast Untitled, 1984, represents the tour-de-force of expressive line, gesture and intoxicating color that made him one of the most influential artists of his generation. As with Basquiat’s greatest works, this painting explores the central and reoccurring theme of the human figure within his oeuvre. Painted in the artist’s signature neo-expressionist style, a totem-like figure emerges as a strangely monolithic dark blue form from a luscious color field that is built up from consecutive layers of ochre, cream, dusty pink and orange paint. Its distinguishing features are rendered intuitively with an astonishing economy of means: impulsively scribbled red and yellow graphic lines render the disjointed arms and grimacing teeth, while coarse impasto brushstrokes sculpt the lobotomized head from which piercing eyes glare at us. Evoking Basquiat’s seminal Bird as Buddha from the same year, Untitled is distinct within his larger oeuvre for full-frontal portrayal of a singular figure and its balanced chromatic abstraction. Executed in 1984, Untitled was created at the height of Basquiat’s notoriously short but prodigious artistic career that ended with his untimely death five years later. By 1984, the year of Untitled’s creation, Basquiat already had five major solo shows across America, Europe, and Japan under his helm and was the youngest artist - at 23 years of age - ever to be included in the Whitney Biennial; only a year later his iconic stature graced the cover of the The New York Times Magazine. Untitled perfectly articulates the raw, unfiltered expressionism, painterly energy and sheer breadth of artistic virtuosity that garnered Basquiat critical acclaim. Basquiat’s distinctive visual idiom is the result of a compulsive and intuitive process, one which borrows liberally from such disparate fields as urban street culture, music, poetry, African-American and Aztec cultural histories and a broad range of art historical sources. In the present work, the artist's signature use of pentimento - i.e. the presence of earlier gestures, scrapes, forms, or strokes that have been changed and painted over - results in a powerful and compelling portrait that brilliantly fuses the figurative with the abstract. The crudely depicted face belies Basquiat’s admiration for anti-establishment artist Jean Dubuffet whose rejection of traditional portraiture and the dictum “I believe very much in value of savagery; I mean: instinct, passion, mood, violence, madness" Basquiat voraciously pursued in Untitled specifically evokes Dubuffet’s acclaimed early portraits from the late 1940s and 50s, in which his subject’s contours were scratched like graffiti into a densely covered canvas. As Rene Ricard aptly observed in his seminal Artforum essay: ”If Cy Twombly and Jean Dubuffet had a baby and gave it up for adoption it would be Jean-Michel- The elegance of Twombly is there [and] from the same source (graffiti) and so is the brut of the young Dubuffet. Except the politics of Dubuffet needed a lecture to show, needed a separate text, whereas in Jean-Michel-they are integrated by the picture's necessity" (Rene Ricard, "The Radiant Child," Artforum, December 1981, p. 35). As with another seminal painting from the same time period, Untitled (High Museum of Art, Atlanta), the present work stands out within the scope of Basquiat’s oeuvre for its focus on a singular, frontally-portrayed figure and its high degree of chromatic nuance and abstraction. In stark contrast to the frenetic canvases of Basquiat’s earlier years, Untitled puts forward a more serene composition. Indeed, the juxtaposition of the blue color block against the expressively painted swaths of color lend the painting a chromatic balance that is a rare for Ba

Auction archive: Lot number 11
Auction:
Datum:
18 May 2017
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF JEAN-MICHEL-BASQUIAT Jean-Michel-Basquiat Untitled acrylic and paper on canvas 66 x 60 in. (167.6 x 152.4 cm.) Executed circa 1984.
Provenance Acquired from the artist by the present owner Exhibited Abidjan, Ivory Coast, Centre Culturel Français, Jean-Michel-Basquiat, October 10 - November 7, 1986 Catalogue Essay Pulsating with raw unfiltered energy, Jean Michel Basquiat’s vast Untitled, 1984, represents the tour-de-force of expressive line, gesture and intoxicating color that made him one of the most influential artists of his generation. As with Basquiat’s greatest works, this painting explores the central and reoccurring theme of the human figure within his oeuvre. Painted in the artist’s signature neo-expressionist style, a totem-like figure emerges as a strangely monolithic dark blue form from a luscious color field that is built up from consecutive layers of ochre, cream, dusty pink and orange paint. Its distinguishing features are rendered intuitively with an astonishing economy of means: impulsively scribbled red and yellow graphic lines render the disjointed arms and grimacing teeth, while coarse impasto brushstrokes sculpt the lobotomized head from which piercing eyes glare at us. Evoking Basquiat’s seminal Bird as Buddha from the same year, Untitled is distinct within his larger oeuvre for full-frontal portrayal of a singular figure and its balanced chromatic abstraction. Executed in 1984, Untitled was created at the height of Basquiat’s notoriously short but prodigious artistic career that ended with his untimely death five years later. By 1984, the year of Untitled’s creation, Basquiat already had five major solo shows across America, Europe, and Japan under his helm and was the youngest artist - at 23 years of age - ever to be included in the Whitney Biennial; only a year later his iconic stature graced the cover of the The New York Times Magazine. Untitled perfectly articulates the raw, unfiltered expressionism, painterly energy and sheer breadth of artistic virtuosity that garnered Basquiat critical acclaim. Basquiat’s distinctive visual idiom is the result of a compulsive and intuitive process, one which borrows liberally from such disparate fields as urban street culture, music, poetry, African-American and Aztec cultural histories and a broad range of art historical sources. In the present work, the artist's signature use of pentimento - i.e. the presence of earlier gestures, scrapes, forms, or strokes that have been changed and painted over - results in a powerful and compelling portrait that brilliantly fuses the figurative with the abstract. The crudely depicted face belies Basquiat’s admiration for anti-establishment artist Jean Dubuffet whose rejection of traditional portraiture and the dictum “I believe very much in value of savagery; I mean: instinct, passion, mood, violence, madness" Basquiat voraciously pursued in Untitled specifically evokes Dubuffet’s acclaimed early portraits from the late 1940s and 50s, in which his subject’s contours were scratched like graffiti into a densely covered canvas. As Rene Ricard aptly observed in his seminal Artforum essay: ”If Cy Twombly and Jean Dubuffet had a baby and gave it up for adoption it would be Jean-Michel- The elegance of Twombly is there [and] from the same source (graffiti) and so is the brut of the young Dubuffet. Except the politics of Dubuffet needed a lecture to show, needed a separate text, whereas in Jean-Michel-they are integrated by the picture's necessity" (Rene Ricard, "The Radiant Child," Artforum, December 1981, p. 35). As with another seminal painting from the same time period, Untitled (High Museum of Art, Atlanta), the present work stands out within the scope of Basquiat’s oeuvre for its focus on a singular, frontally-portrayed figure and its high degree of chromatic nuance and abstraction. In stark contrast to the frenetic canvases of Basquiat’s earlier years, Untitled puts forward a more serene composition. Indeed, the juxtaposition of the blue color block against the expressively painted swaths of color lend the painting a chromatic balance that is a rare for Ba

Auction archive: Lot number 11
Auction:
Datum:
18 May 2017
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
Try LotSearch

Try LotSearch and its premium features for 7 days - without any costs!

  • Search lots and bid
  • Price database and artist analysis
  • Alerts for your searches
Create an alert now!

Be notified automatically about new items in upcoming auctions.

Create an alert