Thursday, 29 November 2018

Jean Michel Basquiat


I didn't manage to catch Basquiat: Boom for Real, earlier this year at the Barbican, so on hearing that his work was sharing the bill along with the amazing Egon Schiele at the Fondation Louis Vuitton I was determined to catch this show. It is the first time that I have seen any of his work in the flesh, as apparently no institution in the UK holds any pieces of his work, which is quite amazing given his legend. There was more of it here than you could shake a stick at, as Basquiat's work occupies all four floors of the Louis Vuitton Foundation building. I did find some of it hit and miss, and dare I say repetitive. When he was good though, he was very, very good, as is evidenced in the large series of skulls he produced below. I think some of his figurative work suffers from the frenzied spontaneity of Basquiat's execution rather than the discipline required of sustained drawing from direct observation, which is precisely the strength that benefits the work of Schiele contrasted at the same venue in the lower galleries (here). Basquiat though had no formal art training and took much of his figurative inspiration from the medical illustrations in his father's copy of Gray's Anatomy. He came up in the art scene through his work as a graffiti artist. Like Kerry James Marshall (here), Basquiat was on a mission to place the black presence into the western canons of art, having seen little to none of this in his art books or visits to museums. Last year Basquiat's painting Justified (1982) sold for $85 million which was the highest price paid for any American artist at auction.


There was so much work exhibited here, much of it titled - "Untitled" - hence no captions on the pictures below. Many of Basquiat's famous pieces which are critically lauded I personally did not like, so haven't included them below. As mentioned above I loved the skulls as they are direct, but felt a lot of the paintings featuring whole figures were weaker. In the 80s there was an in-joke amongst illustrators about filling areas of empty space in their work with hollow symbols like the spiral etc. - meaningless mark-making just for the sake of it. I am no expert, but I suspect Basquiat of doing the same in some of these pieces. He worked spontaneously, and quickly, almost like stream of consciousness, spewing out onto canvas whatever was on his mind. I do feel that certain works would have benefitted from more consideration, and time spent thinking about the mark-making and representation of the figure despite his expressionist style. This said his rapid execution is also a strength, as it gives the paintings a rawness and immediacy which appeals to the collectors and a certain section of his admirers. 


Basquiat seemed to be in a rush, and given his early demise with hindsight we can possibly see why. He created over a thousand paintings and even more drawings all executed in less than a decade. In a documentary I saw earlier this year one of his early art dealers was accused of exploiting Basquiat, locking him in her basement and forcing him to paint, then selling on the paintings at exhorbitant prices and giving him little in return. Unsurprisingly given this treatment he was distrustful of art dealers and described his work as being '80% anger'. This is a really striking exhibition and kudos to Fondation Louis Vuitton for putting on yet another strong blockbuster of a show for the third year running.














A portrait of Basquiat and Warhol, and some of their joint collaborative paintings featured in the exhibition. In much the same way Schiele adopted Gustav Klimt as mentor/father figure, Warhol was fostered in a similar role for Basquiat. As the stars of both younger artists rose though, both would go on to distance themselves from their mentors and for a while even eclipse them. 























I loved the boxing and jazz paintings and also this double portrait drawing of young/old Picasso and the accidental reference to the two big current Picasso shows across town in Paris at the Musee D'Orsay (here), and the Picasso Museum.The exhibition ends with Basquiat's poignant, much disputed 'last painting' Riding With Death (1988).






Jean-Michel Basquiat
until 14th January 2019
Fondation Louis Vuitton
8 Avenue du Mahatma Gandhi
Bois de Boulogne
Paris 
France

Sunday, 25 November 2018

Egon Schiele

Self Portrait in a Peacock Waistcoat, 1911

Another artist whose work is ubiquitous this year is Egon Schiele, it being the hundredth anniversary of the death of both himself and his friend and mentor Gustav Klimt. There is currently a show of both artists work at the Royal Academy in London, but it was to the Fondation Louis Vuitton I made my way once again whilst in the French capital, on a rainy Parisian evening, to witness this intriguing double-header of an exhibition featuring the work of Schiele and Jean-Michel Basquiat.


I don't think any exhibition of Schiele's work will surpass those that I saw last year in Vienna at the Albertina (here), and the Leopold Museum (here), both of which were dazzlingly comprehensive retrospectives, perfect showcases for his amazing expressionist draughtsmanship and painting. This exhibition though contains many works that I hadn't seen before, and contrasts and lays bare the similarities of two figurative artists with expressionistic styles, both regarded as rebellious outsiders in their day, and who had both died before they reached the age of 30. Sensibly though the curators have separated the exhibition space, giving both artists their own areas. A good Schiele exhibition is always an intense, deeply challenging affair, and with this one I was again left in raptures at the way in which Schiele handles the big themes of mourning, death, desire, and blatant sexuality. I also admire the sense of defiance and menace exuded by many of the models in his paintings and drawings who stare confrontationally out of the picture plane. This is yet another exhibition which serves as a reminder to artists to keep looking and drawing. If only I could draw like this!


Self Portrait, 1910

Self Portrait with Physalis, 1912

Self Portrait, 1913

Two Seated Girls, 1911

Roderick Mackey, Pianist, 1913

Self Portrait, 1910

Boy in a Green Coat, 1910

Reclining Nude, Girl in  a Striped Smock, 1911

Portrait of a Gentleman, Carl Reininghaus, 1910

Portrait of Doctor X, 1910

Portrait of Otto Freund, 1910

Portrait of Eduard Kosmak, 1910

Self Portrait With Open Mouth, 1910

Standing Man, 1913

Study of Hands

Danaë, 1909

Nude Boy Lying On a Patterened Blanket, 1908


Self Portrait, 1914

Self Portrait in Green Shirt With Eyes Closed, 1914

Self Portrait in Jerkin With Right Elbow Raised, 1914

Standing Boy in a Striped Shirt, 1910


Self Portrait with Model, 1913

Self Portrait with Model, 1913 (detail)

Self Portrait with Model, 1913 (detail)

Cowering Boy, Paul Erdman, 1915

Autumn Sunflowers, 1918

The Small Town, 1914

The Bridge, 1913

Pregnant Woman and Death, 1911

Procession, 1911

The Lovers, 1918

The Prostitute, 1913


Reclining Woman With Blonde Hair, 1914

Seated Semi-Nude, 1914

Standing Female Nude With Blue Cloth, 1914

Standing Nude, 1917

 Standing Nude, 1917

Portrait of the Artists Wife Holding Her Right Leg, 1917





Egon Schiele
until 14th January 2019
Fondation Louis Vuitton
8 Avenue du Mahatma Gandhi
Bois de Boulogne
Paris 
France