MIAMI, FLA.- Beginning August 12 through October 16, 2016,
Pérez Art Museum Miami will present Basquiat: The Unknown Notebooks, an exhibition showcasing Jean-Michel Basquiats rarely seen notebooks, filled with poetry fragments, wordplay, sketches and personal observations. These unique documents offer an intimate look to the artists oeuvre, embodying themes of street life, popular culture, world history, race and class. This exhibition features 160 notebook pages, related objects, works on paper and large-scale paintings. Complementing the exhibition, PAMM has added works from Miami including collaborative paintings made by Basquiat and Andy Warhol and other works that speak to the breadth of this important artists career.
We are thrilled to be able to host this important exhibition on a foundational period in the life of one of our countrys, and the worlds, greatest artists, said PAMM Director Franklin Sirmans. While the show opened appropriately in Brooklyn, where the artist was born, Miami is the perfect host for the conclusion of this show. Basquiats face is on murals in our city, a city which boasts Little Haiti and Little Havana, monikers for the country and city of those places not far away.
Jean-Michel Basquiat (19601988), a cultural icon, is one of the most original, influential and prolific artists of his generation. Born in Brooklyn to a Haitian father and a Puerto Rican mother, Basquiat was raised in a cross-cultural and multilingual family becoming fluent in Haitian Creole, Spanish and Englishlanguages that resonate within Miamis cultural landscape. In the early 1980s, he rose quickly from teenage street artist to a celebrity in both the art scene and popular culture. He was a self-taught artist with encyclopedic and multicultural interests, influenced by comics, advertising, children's sketches, Pop art, hip-hop, politics and everyday life. He is best known for combining vibrant colors, abstract gestures and figuration with language, which often appears in his paintings and drawings in at least one of his three spoken languages. Basquiats handwritten texts are an integral part of his work, as these push the between language and drawing, as well as reveal the artists provocative cultural imaginary.
Basquiat: The Unknown Notebooks emphasizes the artists distinct interplay of text and images, providing unprecedented insight into the importance of writing in the Basquiats process. The works in the exhibition render an intimate view to the artists ability to generate rhythm and poetics using words. The notebook pages contain early renderings of iconic imagerytepees, crowns, skeleton-like figures and grimacing facesthat also appear throughout his large-scale works, including an early drawing related to his famous series, Famous Negro Athletes. Additionally, the exhibition at PAMM includes two paintings made in collaboration with Andy Warhol, exemplifying his collaborative relationship to this other artistic icon.
Basquiat: The Unknown Notebooks provides a significant opportunity to view these remarkable notebooks up close, inviting new insights and perspectives on Basquiats art and his extraordinary talent of using words like brushstrokes, as he once famously said. In Miami, this is also an opportunity to reconsider Basquiats rich cultural background, familiar to our local context and expressed in his exceptional legacy.
Highlights from Basquiat: The Unknown Notebooks include:
The NotebooksOver a 160 pages of personal notebooks belonging to the artist, providing insight into Basquiats relationship to language and drawing, as well as his interest in addressing race, politics, and everyday subjects.
Untitled, 1983A large-scale work, embodying the artists interest in masks, words and painting.
Untitled (Black), 1981An earlier large-scale painting illustrating Basquiats fascination with colors, figuration and abstraction.
Untitled (Crown), 1982A collage and drawing depicting the artists famous crown tag.
Famous Negro Athletes, 1981An early drawing illustrating the artists interest in addressing the complexities of the black experience in contemporary culture.