Basquiat: Popstar der Kunstwelt (TV Movie 2017)

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Basquiat: Popstar der Kunstwelt: Directed by David Shulman. With Jean Michel Basquiat, Bruno Bischofberger, Mary Boone, Bob Colacello. Nearly 30 years after his death, this documentary film of Jean-Michel Basquiat details how the self-taught Brooklyn-born artist rose to be one of the greats on the international art marketplace.

“I appreciate art but rarely anything modern you see. Same with music, in fact I rarely listen to popular music from later than 1980. Iu0026#39;d honestly never heard of Jean – Michel Basquiat until I read about a big exhibition of his which recently came to London. So, my interest piqued, I duly watched this documentary on his brief life and times, as he fatefully joined the celebrated u0026quot;27u0026quot; club of pop-cultural celebrities (including Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Brian Jones, more recently Amy Winehouse) who never got to celebrate their 28th birthday as his life ended when he overdosed in his studio in New York in 1988.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eNow, having read up on him, Iu0026#39;m aware that his art can sell for over $100 million and even if his work still doesnu0026#39;t move me the way my favourite older works (just like I know Iu0026#39;m never going to u0026quot;getu0026quot; rap music), I certainly got from this biographical documentary, the buzz of his arrival on the scene in New York, just when hip-hop music, early rap and break dancing were all getting underway.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eHis story is told by family members, contemporary friends, artists and lovers, interspersed with many clips of the somewhat diffident artist in his milieu, indeed I didnu0026#39;t realise he stood in for Grandmaster Flash in Blondieu0026#39;s u0026quot;Raptureu0026quot; music video of the time. Other cultural icons who make appearances in the narrative include a very brief cameo by the young Madonna, although only indirectly linked to Basquiat and Andy Warhol with a much larger role in Basqiuatu0026#39;s career as the young manu0026#39;s patron and mentor.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIn the few video clips of the artist, he comes across as sometimes slightly bemused at others politically motivated, a complex kid for sure. We get to see his beginnings as a burgeoning graffiti artist on the streets of New York and even as a musician in a band, before eventually finding himself with his provocative large-form artworks. For some arty reason, the director has a middle-aged saxophone player interjecting some riffs between shots which I see as an attempt to claim the same cultural significance for Basquiat as a genius black man after the examples of say, Charlie Parker and later Jimi Hendrix, but it just looks like a gimmicky device from where I was sitting.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eBasquiat wonu0026#39;t be the last popular artist, in the broad term of the phrase to find himself struggling with success and finding misplaced succour in drugs or drink, but Iu0026#39;m glad I know more about him and his work, although even if I had a 100 mil available I doubt Iu0026#39;d ever actually buy one of his paintings.”

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