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Auction archive: Lot number 12

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Estimate
£900,000 - £1,200,000
ca. US$1,456,686 - US$1,942,249
Price realised:
£1,105,250
ca. US$1,788,892
Auction archive: Lot number 12

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Estimate
£900,000 - £1,200,000
ca. US$1,456,686 - US$1,942,249
Price realised:
£1,105,250
ca. US$1,788,892
Beschreibung:

Jean-Michel-Basquiat Year of the Boar 1983 Triptych: acrylic on canvas mounted on wood supports. Overall: 244 x 190 cm. (96 x 74 3/4 in). Signed and titled 'YEAR OF THE BOAR' Jean-Michel-B' on the reverse of the central panel.
Provenance Larry Gagosian Gallery, Los Angeles; The Stephane Janssen Collection, Belgium; Private collection, New York Exhibited Los Angeles, Larry Gagosian Gallery, Jean-Michel-Basquiat: New Paintings, 8 March – 2 April, 1983; Kunzelsau, Museum Wurth, Jean-Michel-Basquiat, 6 October, 2001 – 2 January, 2002 Literature E. Navarra, Lean-Michel Basquiat, Paris, 1996, vol. I, p. 145 (illustrated), vol. II, no.4, p. 106 (illustrated), p. 236 (installation view); E. Navarra, Jean-Michel-Basquiat, Paris, 2000, p. 169 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Jean-Michel-Basquiat, the artist and his acclaimed oeuvre, requires no introduction. His story is well known to all, the artist-rebel hailing from a poor, immigrant background who, after living on the streets of New York City, meteorically rose to the top of the art world only to fall even faster and harder, tragically consumed by a debilitating drug habit and a low sense of self esteem. Like many of history’s artistic prodigies, the tormented Vincent van Gogh comes most immediately to mind, Basquiat departed this world never having really belonged but not without leaving behind a consequential, brilliant oeuvre. In just eight brief years, Basquiat displayed the most exceptional ability to execute poignant paintings loaded with attitude and turmoil and presenting infinite layers of a consciousness grappling with the transcendental, existential issue that has confronted humanity since the dawn of time- the meaning of life and death. In the present lot, Year of the Boar, a sparse but powerfully expressionistic work from one of his most important years, 1983, Jean-Michel-Basquiat tackles head on the loaded art historical tradition of the triptych in painting. Basquiat chosen format and imagery, a three panel work with a vigorously depicted horned, masked figure on the central panel, is immediately reminiscent of Renaissance crucifixion triptychs. Basquiat’s enraged, screaming protagonist is Christ on the cross with the two other criminals crucified with Jesus in Golgatha simply hinted at by darkness, monochromatic black canvases on either side. At the base of the triptych, instead of the biblical INRI, a latin acronymyn inscribed on the cross with which Christ was crucified, Basquiat has adorned in a graffiti like manner each canvas with a word from the phrase ‘Chinese New Year’ followed by a copyright symbol. Loosely written text and corporate iconography, two of the cornerstones of Basquiat’ s oeuvre, reference not only his admiration of the avant-garde painter Cy Twombly but also his roots in New York City’s underground art scene where he artistically and physically undermined the establishment. What is most striking in the Year of the Boar is the beautifully rendered, animalistic figure of the triptych’s central panel. Painted in the same raw energy that inhabited Francis Bacon paintings, Basquiat’s anthropomorphic creature displays an aggression evident in its primal scream. In fact, Year of the Boar is reminiscent of Bacon’s first mature work, the biblical triptych Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion, a masterpiece of 20th century art, in which three writhing creatures expressionistically vent all their anger and frustration. Basquiat’s fascination with Primitive art and his appropriation of the masters that came before him is well documented; from African ritual masks to Picasso and Dubuffet, his oeuvre not only manages to succinctly synthesize the history of art but most importantly offer a highly personal, candid glimpse into the soul of a troubled artists. Like Bacon, Basquiat struggled with his identity and sense of belonging so perhaps the Christ-like central figure can be read as a self-portrait – a cry for help in which Basquiat the martyr with his bloodshot eyes, open, screaming mouth, and sharpened teeth attempts to release his demons. In early 1983 Basquiat was living in Los Angeles with the young, up and coming Pop star Madonna and frantically preparing a bo

Auction archive: Lot number 12
Auction:
Datum:
17 Oct 2009
Auction house:
Phillips
17 Oct 2009 London
Beschreibung:

Jean-Michel-Basquiat Year of the Boar 1983 Triptych: acrylic on canvas mounted on wood supports. Overall: 244 x 190 cm. (96 x 74 3/4 in). Signed and titled 'YEAR OF THE BOAR' Jean-Michel-B' on the reverse of the central panel.
Provenance Larry Gagosian Gallery, Los Angeles; The Stephane Janssen Collection, Belgium; Private collection, New York Exhibited Los Angeles, Larry Gagosian Gallery, Jean-Michel-Basquiat: New Paintings, 8 March – 2 April, 1983; Kunzelsau, Museum Wurth, Jean-Michel-Basquiat, 6 October, 2001 – 2 January, 2002 Literature E. Navarra, Lean-Michel Basquiat, Paris, 1996, vol. I, p. 145 (illustrated), vol. II, no.4, p. 106 (illustrated), p. 236 (installation view); E. Navarra, Jean-Michel-Basquiat, Paris, 2000, p. 169 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Jean-Michel-Basquiat, the artist and his acclaimed oeuvre, requires no introduction. His story is well known to all, the artist-rebel hailing from a poor, immigrant background who, after living on the streets of New York City, meteorically rose to the top of the art world only to fall even faster and harder, tragically consumed by a debilitating drug habit and a low sense of self esteem. Like many of history’s artistic prodigies, the tormented Vincent van Gogh comes most immediately to mind, Basquiat departed this world never having really belonged but not without leaving behind a consequential, brilliant oeuvre. In just eight brief years, Basquiat displayed the most exceptional ability to execute poignant paintings loaded with attitude and turmoil and presenting infinite layers of a consciousness grappling with the transcendental, existential issue that has confronted humanity since the dawn of time- the meaning of life and death. In the present lot, Year of the Boar, a sparse but powerfully expressionistic work from one of his most important years, 1983, Jean-Michel-Basquiat tackles head on the loaded art historical tradition of the triptych in painting. Basquiat chosen format and imagery, a three panel work with a vigorously depicted horned, masked figure on the central panel, is immediately reminiscent of Renaissance crucifixion triptychs. Basquiat’s enraged, screaming protagonist is Christ on the cross with the two other criminals crucified with Jesus in Golgatha simply hinted at by darkness, monochromatic black canvases on either side. At the base of the triptych, instead of the biblical INRI, a latin acronymyn inscribed on the cross with which Christ was crucified, Basquiat has adorned in a graffiti like manner each canvas with a word from the phrase ‘Chinese New Year’ followed by a copyright symbol. Loosely written text and corporate iconography, two of the cornerstones of Basquiat’ s oeuvre, reference not only his admiration of the avant-garde painter Cy Twombly but also his roots in New York City’s underground art scene where he artistically and physically undermined the establishment. What is most striking in the Year of the Boar is the beautifully rendered, animalistic figure of the triptych’s central panel. Painted in the same raw energy that inhabited Francis Bacon paintings, Basquiat’s anthropomorphic creature displays an aggression evident in its primal scream. In fact, Year of the Boar is reminiscent of Bacon’s first mature work, the biblical triptych Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion, a masterpiece of 20th century art, in which three writhing creatures expressionistically vent all their anger and frustration. Basquiat’s fascination with Primitive art and his appropriation of the masters that came before him is well documented; from African ritual masks to Picasso and Dubuffet, his oeuvre not only manages to succinctly synthesize the history of art but most importantly offer a highly personal, candid glimpse into the soul of a troubled artists. Like Bacon, Basquiat struggled with his identity and sense of belonging so perhaps the Christ-like central figure can be read as a self-portrait – a cry for help in which Basquiat the martyr with his bloodshot eyes, open, screaming mouth, and sharpened teeth attempts to release his demons. In early 1983 Basquiat was living in Los Angeles with the young, up and coming Pop star Madonna and frantically preparing a bo

Auction archive: Lot number 12
Auction:
Datum:
17 Oct 2009
Auction house:
Phillips
17 Oct 2009 London
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