NEW YORK, NY.- Sothebys announced it will auction two works by Jean-Michel Basquiat from the collection of the late Enrico Navarra, the artists great champion, gallerist and editor of the celebrated monograph on the artists work.
Both executed in 1968, Black and Jazz are important works from the pivotal final years of Basquiats extraordinary life and artistic practice. Underscoring their importance, the works are illustrated on the case of Navarras monograph on the artist. Offered on behalf of Navarras estate, Black and Jazz works are estimated at $4/6 million each in Sothebys marquee Contemporary Art Evening Auction in New York, which will be livestreamed to the world on 28 October.
A visionary with unparalleled instinct, Navarra believed in and championed artists well before they came to fame. He was instrumental in nurturing Basquiats market, including authoring of the most comprehensive compendium of the artists work, and organizing and promoting the artists exhibitions worldwide laying the groundwork for his meteoric rise. Navarra was also one of the first western collectors to acquire and promote contemporary Asian art. He published a series of Made by books, including Made by Chinese (1996), Made by Brazilians (2014), Made by Thai (2019), and more.
The New York exhibitions for Sothebys Evening Sales of Contemporary and Impressionist & Modern Art will open by appointment on 21 October.
Grégoire Billault, Head of Sothebys Contemporary Art Department in New York, said: As a great champion of emerging artists around the world, Enrico Navarra was responsible for inspiring a global appreciation for many renowned artists most especially Jean-Michel Basquiat. Through his exhibitions, scholarship and beyond, Navarra had a profound role in developing the international market for Basquiats work that we see today. We are honored to offer two works from his estate this month.
Combining two-dimensional Xeroxed drawings and painted surfaces with three-dimensional wooden sculptural elements, Black and Jazz each feature examples of Basquiats most iconic motifs, and powerfully represent Basquiats radical multi-media approach to artmaking. The wooden surfaces of the present works recall the artists masterworks of the early 1980s, when he crafted stretchers and frames from objects such as carpet tacks, rope, wooden crates, canvas, and wooden moldings found on the streets of New York. Both works have been widely exhibited in the years since their execution in 1986.
Jazz reflects Basquiats interest in music as a central theme throughout many of his most important paintings. The work features a Xerox drawing referencing the song Nows the Time by Charles Parker, the inspiration for Basquiats iconic painting by that same name Nows the Time from 1985 painted one year before the present work. Several other examples of Basquiats signature motifs appear in Jazz: the artists familiar copyright symbol recalls his days as the NYC graffiti artist ©SAMO, and anatomical drawings reference his lifelong fascination with the internal structure of the human body.
Black exemplifies Basquiats central focus upon issues of race and representation. As in Jazz, several other examples of Basquiats iconic motifs appear within the surface of Black: the artists iconic three-point crown recalls his tags as graffiti artist ©SAMO, echoing the © which appears in Jazz. A single, skull-like head the most iconic and enduring motif of Basquiats oeuvre recalls many of the artists best-known masterworks.