Jean-Michel Basquiat

Overview

Jean-Michel Basquiat was an American visual artist who rose to prominence in the 1980s. His work combined the aesthetics of street art, hip-hop, New York punk, African iconography, and German expressionism, leading to a singular style that made him a breakout star in a short period of time.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • View Jean-Michel Basquiat's artwork

    The iconic artist had a short career, but he produced a massive body of work and changed the style of American art by bringing together pop art, graffiti, hip-hop, and punk. His work still hangs in galleries across the world. View scans of the most famous ones here.

  • Basquiat produced more than 1,000 paintings in 10 years

    He worked incredibly quickly, producing an estimated 1,000 paintings and 2,000 drawings during his 10-year career. Despite having little formal training, Basquiat was an autodidact who read and consumed widely, then rapidly infused those influences into his work.

  • Basquiat dropped out of high school at 15

    Basquiat struggled with his father’s expectations of a white collar life for his son and floundered in school. He dropped out at 15 and left home at 17, living in various places. After finding success, he returned to his father’s home in a limousine and said, “Papa, I made it.”

  • An indie film helped launch Basquiat's art career

    Basquiat starred in “Downtown 81” as a struggling artist, which was not far from reality. In fact, the paintings that he carries throughout the film are some of his earliest works. The production gave him canvas and paint, which he used to create other paintings.

  • Blondie's Debbie Harry was Basquiat's first buyer

    The frontwoman appeared alongside the artist in the film “Downtown 81” and, afterward, purchased the 1981 painting “Cadillac Moon.” It was the first painting on canvas that Basquiat sold and a sign of the style and success that would follow.

  • Jean-Michel Basquiat made a last-minute cameo in Blondie's 'Rapture' music video

    The classic 1981 track brought hip-hop culture to new wave. Influential DJ Grandmaster Flash was supposed to appear in the video, but he didn't make it to the set, so the artist filled in, standing at a turntable as Debbie Harry rapped. Check him out at the 1:52 mark.

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