Basquiat
Paintings-for Enrico-under the influence of pork
On a turbulent
flight out of Vienna, en route to Paris, I was asked to write a couple of pages
about the works of Jean-Michel Basquiat. The passengers on this bumpy
journey-Enrico Navarra, Sebastian Moreu, and myself were in the throes of what
happened to be an enormous Austrian pork hock...at least we hoped it was. We'd
acquired the beast at a small, run down, carnival-like market on the edge of
Vienna. Our feast was primitive and ferocious. Speaking for myself, I can
honestly say that it had been at least 24 hours since any solid had slithered
down my gullet and my appetite was ravenous. And now, here we were, bearing down
on this greasy pig meat and all to grateful for it, even as the plane dipped and
jilted us around like kewpee dolls.
The brain has been fed well that day, having just seen a collection of
Jean-Michel Basquiat's works and then on to another museum for a quick peak at a
huge Warhol exhibition. All this information, in the matter of a few hours, is
enough stimulation to drive any man to the nearest carnival-like market and
throw down all of his coin for as much pork as humanly possible. So we did just
that...
Between bites, Enrico brought up the idea of me writing something for the new
and updated of the big book of Basquiat paintings he was about to re-publish. He
said that if I wrote the piece, I should, at all costs, try to avoid writing
about Basquiat's life. Everyone, it seems, has a tendency to write more about
the man than the work itself. This seemed fair enough, especially since I didn't
know the guy and had never met him, so the only thing that I really have is my
opinion and my take on the legacy of what he left behind... in art. That, and of
course, we seemed to share the same affinity for pork products. However, it is
almost impossible to speak about his works without it becoming a crude
dissection of the man. On any canvas or drawing, he spilled himself... maybe
even without wanting to. His thoughts, his feelings- however fleeting,
unfinished or incomplete are captured in that moment when he connected with his
target. Early drawings show that he even literally shed his own blood onto the
paper as proof of his commitment to the piece, his art... an acceptance of his
destiny. A blood fusion, like a voodoo ritual, making the man and his art
inseparable, an unholy bond merging the two into one.
If we really get down to brass tacks here, we can begin by saying that Basquiat
is not for everyone. Much like pork is not for everyone. You either get it, or
you don't. One either loves with a passion, or despises with a vengeance. I've
never heard of anyone saying , Well, he's okay, I guess... No, to my knowledge,
that doesn't happen with Basquiat.This is a very difficult result to achieve in
any art form. The capability of not merely floating nicely in the middle, like a
medium-tempered, semi-well-intentioned, virtually-invisible neighbor, whose
passivity grates on ones very being, but rather, the ability to speed like a
bullet into the brains and bodies of the many jaded, and therefore ruined,
intellectual art-hag and simpleton alike. That is the objective. It is a game of
hit or miss. And when this motherfucker hits, he hits hard, on many levels.
There are some of his works that kill me and some that do absolutely nothing for
me.But once you are touched by him, you are burned into either a kind of
emotional stillness, or you may find yourself on the verge of doubling over into
a painful belly laugh. Because as much honesty and history and life experience
that he spewed into his drawings, paintings, objects, writings, whatever... he
had a killer sense of humor. Even in some of his most poignant works, his
devilish sense of the absurd came through like gangbusters, completely
unfiltered. As did his heartfelt disappointments in the human race, and his
hopes for it. The signature imagery that comes to mind: the crown, the halo of
thorns, portraits stripped of flesh, vital organs pumping blood- blue veined or
devoid of any life, his childhood heroes Hank Aaron and Charlie Parker, etc...,
sainted for all eternety, the homage to his ancestry, endless references to his
childhood...he splayed himself open like a can of sardines for all of us to pick
at, as he, in fact, devoured us. He was never truly able to hide his feelings or
influence in the work. He openly acknowledged Cy Twombly, Picasso, the word
juxtaposition of William Burroughs and Brian Gyson , Andy Warhol, Leonardo da
Vinci, Be Bop Jazz, T.V. programs and cartoons. He sometimes even used the
drawings of his friend's children as inspirations. His deep understanding and
profound confusion with the American culture that he practically drownd himself
in, was also an infinite reservoir from which he could draw upon for his chaotic
assaults.
Looking at these works, one cannot escape without feeling the almost perverse
sense of care taken to raw detail with what seems an acute distracted
concentration. However crude the image may be or how fast it appears to have
been executed- every line, mark, scratch, drip, footprint, fingerprint, word,
letter, rip and imperfection is there because he allowed it to be there.
His paintings and drawings come alive for me every time I look at them, and if
Jean-Michel Basquiat had stuck around for a bit longer, I like to think that he
might have eventually moved into animation, for a time at least, combining his
music, his language and drawings into an arena seemingly more palatable to the
rank and file, but one that would have opened the floodgates for his massages to
attack the masses. Something akin to Lenny Bruce's Thank You Mask Man , an
ingenious weapon that enabled him to scatter his divine tirades out into the
world without the hammer of censorship slamming him hard.
Had Jean-Michel Basquiat lived through the fatal times that eventually took him
away from this world, there's no telling what he would've been able to do. The
possibilities are endless.
Nothing can replace the warmth and immediacy of Basquiat's poetry, or the
absolute questions and truths that he delivered. The beautiful and disturbing
music of his paintings, the cacophony of his silence that attacks our senses,
will live far beyond our breath. Basquiat was, and is music... primitive and
ferocious. J.D.
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