Madonna dated Basquiat and she spoke about his work ethic. She said: "Basquiat was my boyfriend for a while, and I remember getting up in the middle of the night and he wouldn't be in bed lying next to me; he'd be standing, painting, at four in the morning, this close to the canvas, in a trance. I was blown away by that, that he worked when he felt moved."
Madonna was his muse for like 2 months she had nothing to do with his creativity she was a club girl everybody was smashing lamp, basquiat just cuffed her . Lol u ppl have no clue but what washed up old yt ppl say lmao
The saddest thing is that the major New York Galleries controlled his unknowing father and sisters in the task of authentication. Too many original Basquiats remain in limbo despite full history and provenance. Basquiat angered all of his gallery handlers because he sold, traded, and gifted countless paintings while in New York and Los Angeles. Today all of his gallery connections who have made millions selling his paintings refuse to speak with anyone about this. The catalog raisonne is a joke since the New York Galleries controlled it. This is a big problem with most major artists in America since too many untrained and greedy people control art for their own ego and financial gain. The artist always comes in last.
One of Basquiat's sisters came into my work and I said to her "you have the same last name as one of my favorite artists" and she just responded with a smirk, "I sure do". Looked her up after and it was indeed one of his sisters. I didn't know he was of Puerto Rican descent which just makes me, a Puerto Rican, love him even more.
I'm an artist. I've been tied to drawing hyper realistic pet portraits for my job. Today, after watching this video I've bought some canvases and some bright acrylic paints and I cannot wait for them to arrive!! Absolutely inspired to become out of the box creative again.
0h brilliant, good for you, so does that mean in order to paint the same satanic images as this guy paints that you will join a satanic cult and participate in ritual. sacrifices or even spirit cooking and use the leftovers to dissect and muse over for your inspiration to paint and call it art.
This is one of the best videos/documentaries that I have ever watched regarding Jean-Michel Basquiat. I was a kid growing up during much of his career, and he passed away my junior year of high school. I remember feeling quite represented in life of a young black person in the U.S. I am of Caribbean descent as well, and when I first learned of him, I wanted to just soak up as much as I could about him. I appreciate your thoroughness in this video. I enjoy your channel very much!
This being a re upload is of no issue, I watch all of your videos multiple times because sometimes I get carried away and just fall asleep to it, amazing!
It's crazy when you think about it because museums worldwide are packed the brim with stolen African art/artifacts. This world works so strangely and unfairly. How was (is) our art not valid when it was so attractive as to be stolen and presented long, long, long before Basquiat? But so it was (is). Thank you for this video. It reminds me that I need to add some art books to my collection.
So much of fantastic art is heavily inspired or straight up stolen from black, native American and Mexican people. As someone who has worked in the art world it's nauseating how many white artists, curators and art traders profit off of work that isn't even their own.
Thank you for this. His art is just so different from what your told art is as a child. And his death just highlights how easily people can exploit a persons pain.
the decade he gained recognition in was one of the worst decade to live in. seeing him in a room where he is the only black person in every space is triggering. How isolating it'd feel when 2 white people start having a racist exchange and you can't defend yourself because you are in a room of 150 of them and you can't defend yourself. that little clip of him challenging the british journalist with sarcasm/and laughter on his racism drove the point home
Well that depends on the art teacher doesn't it? His art is not children's art because he did not make it as a child, Its not that different and its very low quality art but it is still fun to do basquiat fanart sometimes. He was being exploited but he did it to himself at the end of the day he knew what he was getting into selling himself for money, he is not completely innocent is my point.
@@davidguyette2586 if you mean to say there is a charm to his art that is above lowest quality that is true but there is absolutely no way that basquiats art is in any way comparable to a high art standard shown by other artists who were his age for example egon schiele or even living artists today like james jean i have seen many more artists who are good at a young age. There is no way basquiat put in the time required to learn something like this. Low quality in terms of basquiats art could also mean dirty looking abstract but not entirely in a way that makes too much sense also easy to do shapes that most beginners on the art journey can figure out easily. Basquiat was just lucky to be famous period its the only reason people think twice about looking at his art.
@@davidguyette2586 often times people buy paintings that a camera can do too because of the way the artist paints it there is an energy to the work that is different from a photograph sure the photograph is faster easier more realistic but not the same.
Thanks for doing this video on him, he was a beautiful person and his creativity was so fluid and without restraint i really respect how he stayed real to him self to the very end my respect goes out to you man
It's funny cos just a couple of days ago I watched a short TH-cam documentary on Basquait to remind myself of his story and work, but I really wish I had just seen yours instead. It was so impressively balanced between the man's life and his art, detailed but succinct and narrated with poise and a clear passion. Brilliant work once more! And a terrific, and suitable, choice for Artist's Corner. Looking forward to the next feature.
people love to be like "its just scribbles, its not a talent, it looks like a childs drawing" and i think those people have a very myopic view of art. 1) valuing technical skill and realism over any form of expression would just create a very narrow and boring margin for art to exist in 2) if basquiat truly was doing low-effort scribbles, he would not have had such a distinctive style. you can look at a basquiat and KNOW its a basquiat, there is intention to a specific style. 3) the childs art comparison used as an insult is funny because that is an intentional decision he made. he used a lot of elements from his childhood in his art and wanted to capture this childlike sense of wonder of being able to draw and paint without limitation and without worrying if people are gonna "get" it. when youre a child and you draw something, its the best drawing in the world to you, and thats the simple joy of basquiats art.
So basically you only care cuz it’s Basquiat exactly what’s wrong with modern you people buy the name not the picture excuses excuses excuses I just saw a video of 25 paintings being removed from a museum for being fake basquiat ridiculous I blame Basquiat for the shit show we have now with clowns like hirst
@@DouglasJones-wg6xh this is written so incomprehensibly that im not surprised you completely misinterpreted what i said. i dont view basquiat's work as a brand or product. ive enjoyed his work since i was a little kid because i was so intrigued with how different it was to what i had been taught that art was. i truly hate that basquiat has become so commodified especially because in the radiant child doc they talk about how much that treatment led to his mental health issues at the end of his life. i enjoy the things he said with his art, the complicated thoughts being told in fairly simple ways. his art is like stream of consciousness writing. his art is not just about the end product but the act of creation itself. the use of things like broken doors and cardboard for canvases almost seems like poetic commentary on starving artists but it was for a completely utilitarian reason. he was part of an art movement that celebrated making art for art's sake, and challenged the idea that you needed expensive materials or a degree in order to have permission to make something.
It's tragic how this man just started to go down the gutter towards the end of his life. I watched a thing about Layne Staley a few months back, and it seems as though the drug caused his health to deteriorate in a very similar way the last year or so of his life. Both stories are pretty heartbreaking. Both the men's addiction kicked into full force after the loss of someone close to them, too. With Layne, it was his ex girlfriend and with Jean-Michael, it was Andy Warhol.
Wow, I know quite some things about Basquiat. But your video shows his life, and persona, in such a logical, transparent, chronological way whereby you understand the downwards spiral he ends up in and his tragic death… don’t know if this made sense, but thank you for this regardless. You got yourself a new fan!
The thing gets me as an artist is people don’t see or choose not see the value of the artist until they no longer exist. That’s just insane. I believe the artist would appreciate the same attention and love as their art. It’s cool to remember them after they are gone, but it’s even better to give artist the sincere love and attention, while they are alive. Maybe, I am living in fantasyland, but that’s how I see it. IJS💕😒💯😒🔥😒
Upon Basquiat's death at such a young age he instantly fell into a high monetary value by collectors and the art world. Because he was no longer around to make anything new and the notoriety of being the world's most famous Black artist and the circumstances of his death along of course with his output and it's quality all contributed to the astronomical prices his paintings fetch. The art world is cold and calculating, not to say all people in it are, but the bean counters and money people don't really appreciate artists when they are alive, creating and struggling.
I think the most significant Artist's are often too Avant Garde-the world stands in awe and just can"t fathom it yet. I also think maybe Basquiat was recognized more than he FELT recognized-for many reasons. It makes me so sad that his Mom wasn't around to celebrate with him as he became "successful" and that his Dad was unwilling to-maybe he would have lived long enough to appreciate the recognition.
yes ! this can apply to anyone really. I mean, bring them flowers while they're alive. appreciate and acknowledge a persons existence, let them know how much you see them. I trip out at funerals, all the wonderful things people express.. I often wonder, how much that dead person would've loved to know that we felt the way we did/do about them.
I wonder how the step mother has such a strong hold if she wasn’t legally married to the father I believe. I know she has some of his art but she is very involved.
Perfect way to start my day! Very timely, as well, my friend! I so appreciate your awesomely beautiful words at beginning of this video! Quite moving, good Sir! Thanks so much for this re-upload! Hope your Friday is greatly blessed! Take care, rock on, & peace out!🤘💜🌎
Great work my guy, this video was very insightful, it kept me engaged the whole time watching it. Good choice of music, good job narrating and editing. Keep it going with the work👍🏽👌🏽🌋
basquiat is one of my favorite artists. another artist that i think falls under a similar way of being exploited is keith haring. he was also young when he became famous. he was good friends with basquiat and andy warhol. in his journals he talks about constant travails and being burnt out. he was still quite privileged compared to basquiat but he still went through the rough parts of fame and also died young.
Basquiat came from the middle class. But his ultra bohemian style, and the fact that he was a drug addict and lived alot on the streets made him look like a bum in many peoples point of view. This is also the reason he could not get a taxi even if he had millions
Wow, again, you hit the nail right on the head. Yet another well-produced and well-thought-out primer on one of my favorite artists. Keep up the good work ~ :3
I'm sure that it wasn't easy reworking the video, but thank you very much for it. Basquiat is a really amazing artist, someone who expressed himself by any means necessary simply because. Didn't give a fuck if what he made was realistic or not, didn't let self-doubt kneecap him.
Always enjoyed Basquiat’s art visually when I saw it, but i knew nothing about him or his work, it’s awesome to hear his whole story, I’ve got a newfound respect for him
This is one of the most accurate document I have seen about Basquiat. Most of documentaries I have seen are mainly gossip ones but they don´t go as deep as you did. I´ve subscribed to your channel.
Great documentary, but still just not a fan of his art (sorry), but I appreciate where it came from and did learn more about him. I was an art minor waaay back and a fan of both classic and non-traditional artists… I’ve been to the most famous museums in the world to see the masters… and I have the same appreciation for the masters as I do current, less traditional artists. Right now I’ve been collecting prints from a TH-camr artist named Ten Hundred, whom I’m happy is getting more notice and thru one of his videos I’ve found more artists. I love the fact that these non traditional platforms allow us all to appreciate and support smaller artists without them having to be exploited and absurd values placed on their work by galleries and auction houses. (Example when Banksy sold his art on the sidewalk of NYC for $50 with nobody knowing whose art it was, versus the famous auction incident). I’m happy to have found your channel and look forward to watching more videos. Thank you for your hard work!
Blind Dweller, love your art history videos. Would love to see you speak on Kara Walker’s artwork or other Black American Artists work that was influenced or similar to Basquiat’s work.
One of the absolute, perfect introduction to someone I wish I'd heard of a long time ago. I don't often praise any of this TH-cam thing, with a comment, as I'm really critical. Upon self analysis, I find that you've painted a very wonderful, multifaceted look at a most amazing individual. I'm delving, as far as I can go...into Bryan. Thank you 🙃 Thank you
I generally like the new comments feature where a couple popular comments pop up...but the number of pretentious comments that came up was so disappointing. How embarrassing for you all. Great video.
A great Documentary you've shared! I've seen most of Samo's doc's and this one is supa cool. As a native of Brooklyn I enjoy seeing more about him. I also enjoy the feature you add at the end. Nice! Damia is deep. Interesting channel & pro style narrating. I'll subscribe & look thru your archive's 👍Peace
Typical childhood living in Brooklyn during that time period. Kids during that time would make tiny booklets that were like a movie when you flip the pages. Was was growing up in Brooklyn Graffiti was everywhere and a pass time we all did.everyone has museum memberships; it was free. The museums were free during that time and everyone often visited. Meeting Andy Warhol was the turning point of discovery which was a stroke last of luck. So many young artist were never discovered yet lived the same life style in Brooklyn. So many young people painted all over the walls, sidewalks and subways in the City. Graffiti was everywhere. It was a great pastime everyone did. His life as a Black person was not very different from other Blacks dealing with life in the city, as well as racism that continues today. Everyone rode bikes, wore Afros and dreads. Unfortunately, Jean often sold his paintings for heroin. His family didn’t have much to do with him as they project to know. Yet, when he died, they suddenly became very involved with making money from his art.
Very well done. I look forward to going to his NYC exhibit soon. I don’t see much about his sisters in the documentaries, however. I saw an interview with them by chance here on TH-cam.
So i been on youtube just looking up art then i been looking up artist for im trying to find my medium. Today this video was on my time line. Thanks for this upload.
There were a few too many "fake" Basquiat images I used for visuals than I first realised and a few lines of dialogue were completely false/misleading. Very minor things, but enough to ruin the whole cognency of the video in the long run. And thank you :) I'm pleased to hear they were mistakes mostly unoticed so far haha!
@@BlindDweller Thanks for your unflinching dedication to preventing misinformation in your videos. I swear creators such as yourself have given us more meticulously curated and accurate information than many mainstream documentaries.
It’s crazy to think that Basquiat considered abandoning visual arts to pursue a career in an industrial punk rock band. Makes me wonder if the tv show Grey’s Anatomy was lifted from Basquiat‘s idea.
Great work, man! I fell in love with basquiat in the late nineties, when I was a teenager: both his work and his story. Since then, I've seen multiple documentaries. But you hit me with some facts I didn't know! Good show, man.
One of the things I notice about just about every video on/about this amazing artist is how they all leave out how JMB could literally paint in any style or anyone else’s style flawlessly. This is something that shocked Warhol b/c he knew that he couldn’t do that and he felt that JMB was a better artist than he. Somehow that little factoid seems to be omitted in every video on TH-cam about JMB.
Another lovely video. Could you possibly do a series on works from the French Reign of Terror? Go ahead and look at some of the depictions of decrepit Marat being assassinated in the bath and see if it doesn't have an effect, not to mention many others. Anyways, thanks for what you do!
Thank you for this. I always wanted know more about him since that I saw that David Bowie movie about him. Sad, sad, sad life. So much talent and he expended so much of it trying to get the right response from the wrong people. Damn these drugs that destroy people who lose hope.
Debbie Harry bought one of his very first art works. He appeared in the Blondie classic video Rapture as a DJ. Debbie also appeared in a short art film with him at that point. Later on Madonna did live with him and he gave her some of his art work but when they split. He asked her to bring back the art work he gave her she did bring it back and he destroyed it all right in front of her. They split up not long after.
Miss him 😔Je n'attendrais pas que tous les génies de ce monde meurent avant de partir moi même , la vie est impossible sans génies artistiques , On en as déjà tant perdu 😭
One of my all time favorite artists! Basquiat has been a massive influence on my art ever since I first discovered him. You did a fantastic job with this video, Dweller!
Might as well take inspiration from art from a toddler taped to the refrigerator. The backing of Andy Warhol made him into an 'artist'. It had nothing to do with talent or creativity.
It’s too bad artists feel they have to continue using deadly drugs to please people who care nothing about them personally, only about what they produce. Whether they paint, sing, play an instrument. If those people think that art created sober is terrible, then to hell with them.
That interview scene is mirrored in the 1996 film, Basquiat, with Jeffrey Wright and David Bowie. The interviewer says "so. Are you a painter, or a black painter?" And JW, as Jean Michel, says "are you a writer, or a WHITE writer?"
warhol saw that he was a genius. their collaborations always look joyful and energetic to me - the old master and his genius apprentice well before their time.
1:28 - I'm sure you meant well, Blind Dweller, but describing Jean-Michel Basquiat's carefully crafted, well thought-out, superbly executed masterpieces as "scratches and scribbles of colour" is wholly inaccurate and is reflective of the hostile comments he suffered from the ignorant, tinged-with-racism art world at the time. Otherwise, this well-made telling of the artist's life is inspiring. Thank you for creating and sharing your labour of love.
I honestly can't think why an adult that paints in a style reminiscent of the pre school or infant school of art is so widely appreciated, it's no surprise really because painting or sculpture or any forward guard in art is whatever you choose it to be and can attract an increasing share price...its all about manufacturing really but there it is anyway who am I to judge in the end if it gives pleasure to a child I'm in favour of it
I remember learning about Basquiat in art class in highschool and I was absolutely fascinated by his work. Before then I didn't like contemporary art that much but Basquiat and pieces like The black square I was enamored with non classical art.
Maybe you won't be able to see this comment, but can you do an analysis on a Japanese artist named Fuyuko Matsui please? I believe her works will really peak your interest!
Don't understand how someone would say with a straight face that his work is revolutionary at all. Like all his american peers he was a product of marketing, and a big influence on why art todays is unbearable. Some of his works are almost ok. He is a product of our times were personality and cult of ego are stronger than the works themselves.
@ciao214Z that's exactly part of the brainwash, to create a pseudo movement of fake intellectuals who pretend to like it (some may actually do, some people even like to eat fecal matter) it is all for money, and sadly some young people engulf the pill, who gets benefit from making famous these mediocre fraudsters are the collectors and gallery owners, the rest are just their pawns. Want something really good and out of the ordinary? Check Pavel Filonov or Roberto Matta, go honest & humble and study their works in detail, they're not posters like basquiat, rothko, warhol or pollock, they ACTUALLY requires you to use your brain and senses to the max.
@@jamisondyer8814 yeah, very closed minded for not jumping on the bandwagon with all the “in” fruitcakes. Go scratch your chin and cry in front of some Rothko squares 😂
@@jmsjms296 Basquiat was extremely revolutionary, "some of his works are almost okay" is a ridiculous and uneducated statement, his voice is so extremely profound and explained in his work. Take time to read and think about a JMB piece and I promise it will become more complex and interesting as you go
That’s very true that creative people are often the most sensitive and self destructive this is coming from a vegan for the animals, empath, ex heroin addict, artist so I can confirm it’s true
Madonna dated Basquiat and she spoke about his work ethic. She said: "Basquiat was my boyfriend for a while, and I remember getting up in the middle of the night and he wouldn't be in bed lying next to me; he'd be standing, painting, at four in the morning, this close to the canvas, in a trance. I was blown away by that, that he worked when he felt moved."
Madonna was his muse for like 2 months she had nothing to do with his creativity she was a club girl everybody was smashing lamp, basquiat just cuffed her . Lol u ppl have no clue but what washed up old yt ppl say lmao
@@rickyyout9620 seriously ? what’s the benefit of being racist about it ?
That's horrifying. Madame Xpiration date as a muse?
@@rickyyout9620 bruh when did he say that madonna had anything to do with basquiats creativity
@@seanabergin he didn’t these new journalist and bloggers did,and still do.
The saddest thing is that the major New York Galleries controlled his unknowing father and sisters in the task of authentication. Too many original Basquiats remain in limbo despite full history and provenance. Basquiat angered all of his gallery handlers because he sold, traded, and gifted countless paintings while in New York and Los Angeles. Today all of his gallery connections who have made millions selling his paintings refuse to speak with anyone about this. The catalog raisonne is a joke since the New York Galleries controlled it. This is a big problem with most major artists in America since too many untrained and greedy people control art for their own ego and financial gain. The artist always comes in last.
And or first bcz their art is out there opposed to being in a landfill forgotten forever.
There's a song about this called In The Gallery by Dire Straits.
I’m glad someone sees this, I see it on a small level and I’m kinda sad to say I find solace as this shouldn’t b a thing
I think the really sad part is how without those same people absolutely nobody would know who he is.
Well, if someone will assign a good painting to Basquiat even though he didn't do it, I'm all for it, because the work he did do is mediocre shit.
One of Basquiat's sisters came into my work and I said to her "you have the same last name as one of my favorite artists" and she just responded with a smirk, "I sure do".
Looked her up after and it was indeed one of his sisters.
I didn't know he was of Puerto Rican descent which just makes me, a Puerto Rican, love him even more.
the telling part is that his sister is your fellow Puertorriqueña and you did not recognize her hmmm..
@PHlophe I didn't know he and she were Puerto Rican until I watched this video, after this event occurred. Have a good day.
Haitian and PR
Your work ethic is amazing, but dont burn yourself out, you've given us many full documentary series for free, look after yourself! x
He is n0t d0ing anything, other than rehashing what 0thers have d0cumented aIready
No he likes it if he suffers it is for what he enjoys nothing created well is created in vain
This my first time coming across this amazing content , & I 100% agree .. a like button wasn't enough
I'm an artist. I've been tied to drawing hyper realistic pet portraits for my job. Today, after watching this video I've bought some canvases and some bright acrylic paints and I cannot wait for them to arrive!! Absolutely inspired to become out of the box creative again.
That's awesome, so glad I could inspire a fellow artist in some way! Would love to see what you come up with 😁
@@BlindDweller I'll throw you an email with some art
@@BlindDweller thank you
How did it go?
0h brilliant, good for you, so does that mean in order to paint the same satanic images as this guy paints that you will join a satanic cult and participate in ritual. sacrifices or even spirit cooking and use the leftovers to dissect and muse over for your inspiration to paint and call it art.
This is one of the best videos/documentaries that I have ever watched regarding Jean-Michel Basquiat. I was a kid growing up during much of his career, and he passed away my junior year of high school. I remember feeling quite represented in life of a young black person in the U.S. I am of Caribbean descent as well, and when I first learned of him, I wanted to just soak up as much as I could about him. I appreciate your thoroughness in this video. I enjoy your channel very much!
This being a re upload is of no issue, I watch all of your videos multiple times because sometimes I get carried away and just fall asleep to it, amazing!
...getting carried away and just falling asleep to it, amazing! Indeed...
It's crazy when you think about it because museums worldwide are packed the brim with stolen African art/artifacts. This world works so strangely and unfairly. How was (is) our art not valid when it was so attractive as to be stolen and presented long, long, long before Basquiat? But so it was (is).
Thank you for this video. It reminds me that I need to add some art books to my collection.
It reminds me of an old SAMO tag that said MOST LOVED/HATED. Europeans love black culture, yet historically, mistreat black PEOPLE.
I personally believe a lot of cubism was influenced by African carvings
So much of fantastic art is heavily inspired or straight up stolen from black, native American and Mexican people. As someone who has worked in the art world it's nauseating how many white artists, curators and art traders profit off of work that isn't even their own.
@@joshwiederholt5965 your belief is totally right because picasso was influenced by african art he saw at historical museum.
Get the books!
Thank you for this. His art is just so different from what your told art is as a child. And his death just highlights how easily people can exploit a persons pain.
the decade he gained recognition in was one of the worst decade to live in. seeing him in a room where he is the only black person in every space is triggering. How isolating it'd feel when 2 white people start having a racist exchange and you can't defend yourself because you are in a room of 150 of them and you can't defend yourself. that little clip of him challenging the british journalist with sarcasm/and laughter on his racism drove the point home
Well that depends on the art teacher doesn't it? His art is not children's art because he did not make it as a child, Its not that different and its very low quality art but it is still fun to do basquiat fanart sometimes. He was being exploited but he did it to himself at the end of the day he knew what he was getting into selling himself for money, he is not completely innocent is my point.
@@Mintzoid fair enough.
@@davidguyette2586 if you mean to say there is a charm to his art that is above lowest quality that is true but there is absolutely no way that basquiats art is in any way comparable to a high art standard shown by other artists who were his age for example egon schiele or even living artists today like james jean i have seen many more artists who are good at a young age. There is no way basquiat put in the time required to learn something like this. Low quality in terms of basquiats art could also mean dirty looking abstract but not entirely in a way that makes too much sense also easy to do shapes that most beginners on the art journey can figure out easily. Basquiat was just lucky to be famous period its the only reason people think twice about looking at his art.
@@davidguyette2586 often times people buy paintings that a camera can do too because of the way the artist paints it there is an energy to the work that is different from a photograph sure the photograph is faster easier more realistic but not the same.
Thanks for doing this video on him, he was a beautiful person and his creativity was so fluid and without restraint i really respect how he stayed real to him self to the very end my respect goes out to you man
It's funny cos just a couple of days ago I watched a short TH-cam documentary on Basquait to remind myself of his story and work, but I really wish I had just seen yours instead. It was so impressively balanced between the man's life and his art, detailed but succinct and narrated with poise and a clear passion. Brilliant work once more! And a terrific, and suitable, choice for Artist's Corner. Looking forward to the next feature.
Yeah man, this cat certainly has a knack for covering these things.
@@XANAX-Pilled😊😊😊😮 14:37
people love to be like "its just scribbles, its not a talent, it looks like a childs drawing" and i think those people have a very myopic view of art.
1) valuing technical skill and realism over any form of expression would just create a very narrow and boring margin for art to exist in
2) if basquiat truly was doing low-effort scribbles, he would not have had such a distinctive style. you can look at a basquiat and KNOW its a basquiat, there is intention to a specific style.
3) the childs art comparison used as an insult is funny because that is an intentional decision he made. he used a lot of elements from his childhood in his art and wanted to capture this childlike sense of wonder of being able to draw and paint without limitation and without worrying if people are gonna "get" it. when youre a child and you draw something, its the best drawing in the world to you, and thats the simple joy of basquiats art.
Very well put
So basically you only care cuz it’s Basquiat exactly what’s wrong with modern you people buy the name not the picture excuses excuses excuses I just saw a video of 25 paintings being removed from a museum for being fake basquiat ridiculous I blame Basquiat for the shit show we have now with clowns like hirst
@@DouglasJones-wg6xh this is written so incomprehensibly that im not surprised you completely misinterpreted what i said. i dont view basquiat's work as a brand or product. ive enjoyed his work since i was a little kid because i was so intrigued with how different it was to what i had been taught that art was. i truly hate that basquiat has become so commodified especially because in the radiant child doc they talk about how much that treatment led to his mental health issues at the end of his life. i enjoy the things he said with his art, the complicated thoughts being told in fairly simple ways. his art is like stream of consciousness writing. his art is not just about the end product but the act of creation itself. the use of things like broken doors and cardboard for canvases almost seems like poetic commentary on starving artists but it was for a completely utilitarian reason. he was part of an art movement that celebrated making art for art's sake, and challenged the idea that you needed expensive materials or a degree in order to have permission to make something.
Oh my gosh exactly thank you
@@a.abarker8387 more Marxist bullshit scribbles don’t have meaning unless you’re mentally ill enough to give them some 😭👍💀
Incredible! Thank you for all the hard work you do, it is truly appreciated.
It's tragic how this man just started to go down the gutter towards the end of his life. I watched a thing about Layne Staley a few months back, and it seems as though the drug caused his health to deteriorate in a very similar way the last year or so of his life. Both stories are pretty heartbreaking. Both the men's addiction kicked into full force after the loss of someone close to them, too. With Layne, it was his ex girlfriend and with Jean-Michael, it was Andy Warhol.
Look who he started surrounding himself with, Samo crew,,,
Wow, I know quite some things about Basquiat. But your video shows his life, and persona, in such a logical, transparent, chronological way whereby you understand the downwards spiral he ends up in and his tragic death… don’t know if this made sense, but thank you for this regardless. You got yourself a new fan!
The thing gets me as an artist is people don’t see or choose not see the value of the artist until they no longer exist. That’s just insane. I believe the artist would appreciate the same attention and love as their art. It’s cool to remember them after they are gone, but it’s even better to give artist the sincere love and attention, while they are alive. Maybe, I am living in fantasyland, but that’s how I see it. IJS💕😒💯😒🔥😒
Upon Basquiat's death at such a young age he instantly fell into a high monetary value by collectors and the art world. Because he was no longer around to make anything new and the notoriety of being the world's most famous Black artist and the circumstances of his death along of course with his output and it's quality all contributed to the astronomical prices his paintings fetch. The art world is cold and calculating, not to say all people in it are, but the bean counters and money people don't really appreciate artists when they are alive, creating and struggling.
I think the most significant Artist's are often too Avant Garde-the world stands in awe and just can"t fathom it yet. I also think maybe Basquiat was recognized more than he FELT recognized-for many reasons. It makes me so sad that his Mom wasn't around to celebrate with him as he became "successful" and that his Dad was unwilling to-maybe he would have lived long enough to appreciate the recognition.
yes ! this can apply to anyone really. I mean, bring them flowers while they're alive. appreciate and acknowledge a persons existence, let them know how much you see them. I trip out at funerals, all the wonderful things people express.. I often wonder, how much that dead person would've loved to know that we felt the way we did/do about them.
@@salvaged_wretch so true 🙏🏾😊
I wonder how the step mother has such a strong hold if she wasn’t legally married to the father I believe. I know she has some of his art but she is very involved.
Perfect way to start my day! Very timely, as well, my friend! I so appreciate your awesomely beautiful words at beginning of this video! Quite moving, good Sir! Thanks so much for this re-upload! Hope your Friday is greatly blessed! Take care, rock on, & peace out!🤘💜🌎
Great work my guy, this video was very insightful, it kept me engaged the whole time watching it. Good choice of music, good job narrating and editing. Keep it going with the work👍🏽👌🏽🌋
This series is incredible. Love your poetic, insightful narration.
Thanks for making this doc. I love his art and what he stand for.
what an amazing video! the way Basquiat refused to waver to throughout his entire life is incredible. you can see it in his art
The best Video Essay on Basquiat I have experienced. Great job synthesizing such a complex topic©️
This is such a well researched, written and narrated doc. Love this
as a fellow artist myself this video inspire me the inspiration definitely came through watching this.
basquiat is one of my favorite artists. another artist that i think falls under a similar way of being exploited is keith haring. he was also young when he became famous. he was good friends with basquiat and andy warhol. in his journals he talks about constant travails and being burnt out. he was still quite privileged compared to basquiat but he still went through the rough parts of fame and also died young.
Basquiat came from the middle class. But his ultra bohemian style, and the fact that he was a drug addict and lived alot on the streets made him look like a bum in many peoples point of view. This is also the reason he could not get a taxi even if he had millions
Most great artist endured great suffering. This pain is the source of our success.
This is the best documentar I have seen about Basquiat. ❤
Wow, again, you hit the nail right on the head. Yet another well-produced and well-thought-out primer on one of my favorite artists. Keep up the good work ~
:3
I'm sure that it wasn't easy reworking the video, but thank you very much for it.
Basquiat is a really amazing artist, someone who expressed himself by any means necessary simply because. Didn't give a fuck if what he made was realistic or not, didn't let self-doubt kneecap him.
Always enjoyed Basquiat’s art visually when I saw it, but i knew nothing about him or his work, it’s awesome to hear his whole story, I’ve got a newfound respect for him
This is one of the most accurate document I have seen about Basquiat. Most of documentaries I have seen are mainly gossip ones but they don´t go as deep as you did. I´ve subscribed to your channel.
Great documentary, but still just not a fan of his art (sorry), but I appreciate where it came from and did learn more about him. I was an art minor waaay back and a fan of both classic and non-traditional artists… I’ve been to the most famous museums in the world to see the masters… and I have the same appreciation for the masters as I do current, less traditional artists. Right now I’ve been collecting prints from a TH-camr artist named Ten Hundred, whom I’m happy is getting more notice and thru one of his videos I’ve found more artists. I love the fact that these non traditional platforms allow us all to appreciate and support smaller artists without them having to be exploited and absurd values placed on their work by galleries and auction houses. (Example when Banksy sold his art on the sidewalk of NYC for $50 with nobody knowing whose art it was, versus the famous auction incident). I’m happy to have found your channel and look forward to watching more videos. Thank you for your hard work!
His relationship with his father is the most painfully ironic thing. Has a man (his father) ever been so wrong?
But probably profited from the Estate?
Blind Dweller, love your art history videos. Would love to see you speak on Kara Walker’s artwork or other Black American Artists work that was influenced or similar to Basquiat’s work.
I'm totally inspired because I know the feeling for sure!😊
It’s admirable of your willingness to correct yourself. Integrity is not at all a common thing.
Out of respect for your work and the artist that you're covering, I'll gladly watch this new version, despite watching the old vid.
One of the absolute, perfect introduction to someone I wish I'd heard of a long time ago.
I don't often praise any of this TH-cam thing, with a comment, as I'm really critical. Upon self analysis, I find that you've painted a very wonderful, multifaceted look at a most amazing individual.
I'm delving, as far as I can go...into Bryan.
Thank you 🙃
Thank you
Very cool video. This must have taken tons of work. Thank you.
I generally like the new comments feature where a couple popular comments pop up...but the number of pretentious comments that came up was so disappointing. How embarrassing for you all. Great video.
So excited to watch. Have seen other Doccis re B but still, im excited.😁
Why do some of these comments think you need photo real level painting skills in order to convey a message?
Thinking comments: how interesting!
because you do ---ex art school student
A great Documentary you've shared! I've seen most of Samo's doc's and this one is supa cool. As a native of Brooklyn I enjoy seeing more about him. I also enjoy the feature you add at the end. Nice! Damia is deep. Interesting channel & pro style narrating. I'll subscribe & look thru your archive's 👍Peace
Typical childhood living in Brooklyn during that time period. Kids during that time would make tiny booklets that were like a movie when you flip the pages. Was was growing up in Brooklyn Graffiti was everywhere and a pass time we all did.everyone has museum memberships; it was free. The museums were free during that time and everyone often visited.
Meeting Andy Warhol was the turning point of discovery which was a stroke last of luck. So many young artist were never discovered yet lived the same life style in Brooklyn. So many young people painted all over the walls, sidewalks and subways in the City. Graffiti was everywhere. It was a great pastime everyone did. His life as a Black person was not very different from other Blacks dealing with life in the city, as well as racism that continues today. Everyone rode bikes, wore Afros and dreads.
Unfortunately, Jean often sold his paintings for heroin. His family didn’t have much to do with him as they project to know. Yet, when he died, they suddenly became very involved with making money from his art.
I'm so glad I stumbled upon your channel. You always cover the most interesting subjects and your films are really quite incredible. Thank you!
Very well done. I look forward to going to his NYC exhibit soon. I don’t see much about his sisters in the documentaries, however. I saw an interview with them by chance here on TH-cam.
Aaaa I'm happy to be early 💛 I love your work so much
So i been on youtube just looking up art then i been looking up artist for im trying to find my medium. Today this video was on my time line. Thanks for this upload.
Learn English before you waste your time with whatever trash you consider art, that way at least you didnt waste 100% of your time
How come you had to re-upload it? Either way, it's an excellent video, thank you!
There were a few too many "fake" Basquiat images I used for visuals than I first realised and a few lines of dialogue were completely false/misleading. Very minor things, but enough to ruin the whole cognency of the video in the long run. And thank you :) I'm pleased to hear they were mistakes mostly unoticed so far haha!
@@BlindDweller Thanks for your unflinching dedication to preventing misinformation in your videos. I swear creators such as yourself have given us more meticulously curated and accurate information than many mainstream documentaries.
It’s crazy to think that Basquiat considered abandoning visual arts to pursue a career in an industrial punk rock band. Makes me wonder if the tv show Grey’s Anatomy was lifted from Basquiat‘s idea.
@@eduardomdutra Basquiat was inspired by the original. Basquiat was also around well before the tv program. Thus, the point of wondering.
@@eduardomdutra I’m assuming you have credible evidence that says otherwise right?😁
addicted to your videos since I first watched the Goya episode! would love to see a video on William Blake if I could drop my suggestion in the mix
Great work, man! I fell in love with basquiat in the late nineties, when I was a teenager: both his work and his story. Since then, I've seen multiple documentaries. But you hit me with some facts I didn't know!
Good show, man.
Amazing documentary! Thank you!
One of the things I notice about just about every video on/about this amazing artist is how they all leave out how JMB could literally paint in any style or anyone else’s style flawlessly. This is something that shocked Warhol b/c he knew that he couldn’t do that and he felt that JMB was a better artist than he. Somehow that little factoid seems to be omitted in every video on TH-cam about JMB.
Umm evidence? 🤔
The desire for fame and recognition for some creatives is now an industry.
Dead at 27 interesting that connection of many many great young creative minds all gone too early
Another lovely video. Could you possibly do a series on works from the French Reign of Terror? Go ahead and look at some of the depictions of decrepit Marat being assassinated in the bath and see if it doesn't have an effect, not to mention many others. Anyways, thanks for what you do!
Thank you for this. I always wanted know more about him since that I saw that David Bowie movie about him. Sad, sad, sad life. So much talent and he expended so much of it trying to get the right response from the wrong people. Damn these drugs that destroy people who lose hope.
Did you notice you misspelled Basquiat at the beginning??? Not trying to be a jerk , just letting you know! … you rock!!!
At 6:14 the two paintings left and right are NOT Jean michel basquiat … I thought this is pretty obvious no offence
I was looking for this comment no-one else noticed? They are not works by Jean-michel
Well then you know something others don't because they're 100% credited to him. Not just in this video either but in the "Complete Works of JMB."
This is amazing. Thank you so much!!
Debbie Harry bought one of his very first art works. He appeared in the Blondie classic video Rapture as a DJ. Debbie also appeared in a short art film with him at that point. Later on Madonna did live with him and he gave her some of his art work but when they split. He asked her to bring back the art work he gave her she did bring it back and he destroyed it all right in front of her. They split up not long after.
Another excellent video. Brilliant artist. It's a shame he died so young. ☹️
Miss him 😔Je n'attendrais pas que tous les génies de ce monde meurent avant de partir moi même , la vie est impossible sans génies artistiques , On en as déjà tant perdu 😭
Great storytelling
One of my all time favorite artists! Basquiat has been a massive influence on my art ever since I first discovered him. You did a fantastic job with this video, Dweller!
I agree 💯 percent
Might as well take inspiration from art from a toddler taped to the refrigerator. The backing of Andy Warhol made him into an 'artist'. It had nothing to do with talent or creativity.
Thank U 4 this vidéo 🙌🏾
Amazing work, I have always loved and been inspired by Basquiat, thanks for bringing his work to new audiences.
I've already watched the first upload but I'll happily give you my watch time a second time
Amazin video, thank you!
I'm stunned by this video !!! love it
It’s too bad artists feel they have to continue using deadly drugs to please people who care nothing about them personally, only about what they produce. Whether they paint, sing, play an instrument. If those people think that art created sober is terrible, then to hell with them.
I liked that Basquiat called that guy out for the first word coming to mind regarding him being "primal." 😔
That interview scene is mirrored in the 1996 film, Basquiat, with Jeffrey Wright and David Bowie. The interviewer says "so. Are you a painter, or a black painter?" And JW, as Jean Michel, says "are you a writer, or a WHITE writer?"
warhol saw that he was a genius. their collaborations always look joyful and energetic to me - the old master and his genius apprentice well before their time.
31:14 That silhouette looks eerily similar the one from Into the Spiderverse shown on Miles's graffiti. It that was by intention, that's sensational.
really love learning about art history from you. keep it up big man
wow why are you all styled like how we grew up ?
Rest In Peace To Everyone Who Passed 💔💔💔💔
One of my favorite artists.
He was such a creative, bold and genuin artist. Thanks for sharing with us.
Nice...artlife always i2f the artist...one love...blessings...r.i.p to one of the greatest
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥!!! THANK YOU FOR THIS VIDEO!
Honestly watching these docs have inspired me to do more art again, Thanks Blind
Thanks so much for this video!
1:28 - I'm sure you meant well, Blind Dweller, but describing Jean-Michel Basquiat's carefully crafted, well thought-out, superbly executed masterpieces as "scratches and scribbles of colour" is wholly inaccurate and is reflective of the hostile comments he suffered from the ignorant, tinged-with-racism art world at the time. Otherwise, this well-made telling of the artist's life is inspiring. Thank you for creating and sharing your labour of love.
I honestly can't think why an adult that paints in a style reminiscent of the pre school or infant school of art is so widely appreciated, it's no surprise really because painting or sculpture or any forward guard in art is whatever you choose it to be and can attract an increasing share price...its all about manufacturing really but there it is anyway who am I to judge in the end if it gives pleasure to a child I'm in favour of it
Well maybe but I find a daub is just a daub
Such an original artist!! His work is authenticity and Truth.
You should see the work my 4 year-old cousin does then lol.
@@Mutiny960 I absolutely love children art. And the process is the best to watch!!!
Like anybody else.
What happened to the original, why was it removed?
He simply corrected some errors..
@@ollieoleary "Errors"?
Can you do a video on Eva Hesse or Yayoi Kusama?
This hit me harder than I expected
Happy Heavenily Birthday Jean-Michel🇭🇹🇵🇷♑🙏
What a shame he left so soon. It would have been interesting to see how his work would have evolved over the decades.
I remember learning about Basquiat in art class in highschool and I was absolutely fascinated by his work. Before then I didn't like contemporary art that much but Basquiat and pieces like The black square I was enamored with non classical art.
Let's not forget that Jean Michel is an honorary member of the 27 club.
Maybe you won't be able to see this comment, but can you do an analysis on a Japanese artist named Fuyuko Matsui please? I believe her works will really peak your interest!
This video is Electric!!!!
I didn’t realize this before but his paintings look like artifacts. Does anyone agree?
No
Can you elaborate on that?
Don't understand how someone would say with a straight face that his work is revolutionary at all. Like all his american peers he was a product of marketing, and a big influence on why art todays is unbearable. Some of his works are almost ok. He is a product of our times were personality and cult of ego are stronger than the works themselves.
you are very close minded and very wrong
@ciao214Z that's exactly part of the brainwash, to create a pseudo movement of fake intellectuals who pretend to like it (some may actually do, some people even like to eat fecal matter) it is all for money, and sadly some young people engulf the pill, who gets benefit from making famous these mediocre fraudsters are the collectors and gallery owners, the rest are just their pawns. Want something really good and out of the ordinary? Check Pavel Filonov or Roberto Matta, go honest & humble and study their works in detail, they're not posters like basquiat, rothko, warhol or pollock, they ACTUALLY requires you to use your brain and senses to the max.
@@jamisondyer8814 yeah, very closed minded for not jumping on the bandwagon with all the “in” fruitcakes. Go scratch your chin and cry in front of some Rothko squares 😂
@@jamisondyer8814 What's wrong with that comment? What's wrong with you?
@@jmsjms296 Basquiat was extremely revolutionary, "some of his works are almost okay" is a ridiculous and uneducated statement, his voice is so extremely profound and explained in his work. Take time to read and think about a JMB piece and I promise it will become more complex and interesting as you go
Isn't this the dude jayz got his hairstyle from? Lmaoo
"Major inputs downloaded. The world is thinking... Please wait... The world is thinking..." - SAMO
That’s very true that creative people are often the most sensitive and self destructive this is coming from a vegan for the animals, empath, ex heroin addict, artist so I can confirm it’s true
I liked the content, but found the commercials far too intrusive.
Love the girls art in the art corner