Audio: Interview with Glenn O’Brien
Keith Haring (1958-1990)
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Basquiat and Haring: A Hurried Generation By Glenn O'Brien Keith Haring’s career ended with his death at 31; Jean-Michel Basquiat’s career ended with his death at 27. They were the most powerful artists of their generation and both produced a life’s work in little more than a decade. Their intensity seemed fated, as if they knew they had only a few years to change the world. I met Basquiat when he was 18 years old and best known as the author of SAMO, the cryptic and clever graffiti that suddenly popped up around Manhattan, particularly in the art districts of SoHo and the East Village. Here was a guy doing something really different. This wasn’t just a tag, a turf-signifying signature, this was comedic poetry, post-Zen koans and aphorisms of teenage prophesy. After a few weeks of hanging out, I also discovered that the guy was a real artist. Watching him draw was like watching Willie Mays bat or Dr. J dunk. It was no coincidence that he wasn’t tagging stations on the 6 train, but instead concentrating on Mercer, Greene, Wooster and West Broadway streets. He wasn’t about going to the Bronx but about going to the top. One day, I guess it was 1980, I asked Basquiat who his favorite artist was and he said Haring. I had no idea who that was, but instead of explaining, he just brought him around to my weekly cable TV show, “TV Party.” I couldn’t have been more surprised. It would have been hard to find someone who looked more the part of an innocent. He had a sweet, open, angelic baby face, curly already-receding hair, and he wore bright pink plastic glasses. He looked like someone Woody Allen might have cast to play a teen Woody, nerdy but also somehow blank and almost defiant. He was two and a half years older than Basquiat, but he looked even younger. Later I figured out that this kid was the one who was wheat-pasting provocatively funny collage posters up around the rock clubs, satires of The Daily News and New York Post headlines like: “Reagan Slain by Hero Cop” and “Mob Flees at Pope Rally.” At around the same time, Richard Hambleton was doing police-style chalk outlines on sidewalks covering the same turf. Apparently Haring first met Basquiat by accident at the School of Visual Arts, where Haring was a student. In an interview with Vince Aletti, Haring recalled: “SVA was where I met Kenny Scharf, where I met John Sex; it’s actually where I met SAMO for the first time. I let him into the school without knowing who he was—because he was having trouble getting past the security guard at the front—and he asked me if I’d walk him into the school, so I walked him in, and then later on I saw all this graffiti and found out he was the one who had done it.” That generation of New York artists—Basquiat, Haring, Scharf, Lenny McGurr aka “Futura 2000,” and Hambleton, as well as somewhat older artists like John Fekner—was certainly inspired by the graffiti scene, but what they were doing was more like unauthorized public art. It wasn’t simply about marking out territory, about individuals saying “I’m here” in a world of corporate signs; it was about making art for the great audience, the people on the streets, art that wasn’t a monument to a war hero, or an abstract sculpture funded by a bank, but post-Pop popular art. It often had a message and a political dimension, like the May ’68 posters of Atelier Populaire, but first of all it was art. Hambleton’s anthropomorphic black shadows were painted on walls along streets that were still dangerous, and they could throw a chill up the spine as you turned a corner. Haring’s subway chalk drawings provided a noncommercial, populist form of delight for MTA riders. While Basquiat quit working outside with a bang, writing “SAMO IS DEAD,” Haring continued making his subway drawings into 1985 when he had been represented by the Tony Shafrazi Gallery for three years, and had mounted one-man shows in Rotterdam, Tokyo, Naples, Antwerp, London, Cologne, Milan, Basel and Munich, including a solo show of large steel sculptures at Leo Castelli’s gallery. Haring was committed to erasing the distinction between high and low art, but he tired of having his subway drawings “collected” almost as soon as they appeared, and he had been arrested several times making them. In 1986, he opened the Pop Shop on Lafayette Street which sold his art and products he designed. He said, “My shop is an extension of what I was doing in the subway stations, breaking down the barriers between high and low art.” While Basquiat may seem to have taken the high road, and Haring tried to navigate the tricky territory between major gallery artist and multiples entrepreneur, both artists were keen to have a broad audience and engage their generational peers. Basquiat gave up writing on the walls before Haring, probably because he sensed that what happened to black graffiti artist Michael Stewart, who died at the hands of the police, could easily happen to him. Haring produced events at Club 57 and curated the gallery space at the Mudd Club. He also created and distributed thousands of anti-nuke posters and designed fabric for designer Vivienne Westwood. He created dozens of indoor and outdoor murals; he created TV spots and stage sets for theater, film, video and dance. He painted a large mural for the Palladium nightclub. He collaborated with such diverse artists as Bill T. Jones, Robert Mapplethorpe, Brion Gysin, Jenny Holzer, Duran Duran and Run DMC. Basquiat made postcards and sold them on the street, hawked a line of hand-painted clothes under the name MANMADE, and created multiples, including the Anatomy series; he starred in the film Downtown 81, created an MTV video, illustrated a children’s book written by Maya Angelou and like Haring executed a large mural at the Palladium nightclub; he fronted his own band and produced a seminal hip-hop record. Basquiat DJ’d regularly at the nightclub Area where Haring also painted a skateboard ramp. Both artists were workaholics, creating in vastly diverse media virtually nonstop. Their lives were work. I don’t believe it had anything to do with ambition per se, or greed, or any kind of obsessive compulsive mental states, but with an almost magical desire to reclaim the power of the visual artist with the public. It’s no coincidence that both became close with the idol Andy Warhol, because he was another relentless worker who ranged seamlessly from painting, sculpture and prints, to film, video, theater and publishing, but also because Warhol seemed to want to make art itself bigger—to achieve the level of influence by the pop stars he knew like the Beatles and the Stones. It might have been expected that the 20-something artists sought out an artist old enough to be their father who came closer than any other Pop artist to making truly popular art. What wasn’t expected was that in the end Warhol would be more influenced by Haring and Basquiat than they were by him. The pupils became the master’s master. Warhol, a great draughtsman, had virtually given up drawing until Haring and Basquiat harangued and mocked him into once again showing his hand, which he did with spectacular results in his final bodies of work. Today, Haring and Basquiat are revered as masters and their work is highly coveted, but more than that they got what they really wanted: a mass public. They not only changed the art world, creating and opening for outsiders with vision; they changed the world’s consciousness across a spectrum—from sexual identity to black history. They made art that was educated and political but also stunningly captivating to the eye. They made art that was as big as rock, and they did it for the people, for the kids, and it’s still radiating decades later. From the Collection of a Private Bank
Keith Haring (1958-1990)

Self Portrait

Details
Keith Haring (1958-1990)
Self Portrait
signed, numbered and dated 'K. Haring 1989 1/3' (on the base)
painted steel
144 x 91 x 117 in. (365.8 x 231.1 x 297.2 cm.)
Executed in 1989. This work is number one from an edition of three plus one artist's proof.
Provenance
André Emmerich Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1997
Exhibited
New York, André Emmerich Gallery, Keith Haring on Park Avenue: An Exhibition of the Public Art Fund, June-October 1997, pp. 16-17 (another example exhibited and illustrated).
Art Gallery of Hamilton Ontario, Irving Zucker Sculpture Garden (another example on view).

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Eliza Netter
Eliza Netter

Lot Essay

Dance was a large part of the 1980s New York scene, and played a large part in Keith Haring’s life and artistic production. Although he is best known for the sociopolitical commentary in his works, the theme of dance was also incorporated into the fabric of his art making. His first encounter of combining elements of dance in his work was in 1978, when he made Video Clones, a video of Molissa Fenley, a modern dancer, where he focused solely on her foot movements. The theme of dance was also incorporated into certain drawings and paintings, such as his 1982 work Subway Drawing (Electric Boogie Dancer) and his 1987 Untitled. At times, Haring would use his friend Bill T. Jones, an accomplished dancer, as his reference in showing movement in his works.

His sculptures made during the 1980s also appropriate dance elements , some portraying actual moves of the time, such as the electric slide and the spider move. Self-Portrait, created in 1989, only a year before the artist’s untimely death at the age of 31, is a reflection of Haring in mid-dance, reflecting his passion for the music, dance and nightlife of his era. Haring’s roommate in the early 1980s, Kenny Scharf stated, “From the first moment we met, dance was very much a part of our lives. We first revolved around the B-52s. We followed them everywhere, dancing for hours. We danced space-age go-go, the jerk, [and] the pony” (K. Scharf, quoted in Keith Haring, exh. cat., Whitney Museum of American Art, 1997, p. 214). Haring gave this sculpture life, vigor and movement. The play between the two dimensionality and three dimensionality of the work makes the sculpture lose the stiff, static aspect of traditional sculpture, and thrusts it into a work truly influenced by its time.

Self-Portrait also addresses another important issue of New York in the 80s—AIDS. It carries an added meaning, one of empathy, perseverance and defiance. The AIDS epidemic had quite a large effect on the New York art scene of the 1980s, with many artists either knowing someone who had the disease or having it themselves. Being an openly gay artist addressing sociopolitical issues in his work, the fight for AIDS research and treatment was a topic close to Haring’s heart, and even more so when he was diagnosed with it in 1988. This work in many ways can be seen as a monument—a contemporary take on Rodin’s Balzac, playing with two and three dimensionality. Creating this work in his well-known simplified, childlike, cartoonish style, Haring strips this work of any individuality, despite it being his self-portrait; it is meant to be apiece that people who are also struggling with gay rights and AIDS can relate to.

Haring’s art nearing the end of his career were devoted to AIDS, as he attempted to put a human face on a disease that had taken so many, and on a topic that many people were still afraid of addressing. Self-Portrait is not a work that lamented Haring’s diagnosis and impending death. Rather, it is one that celebrates his life and passion.

It was also important to Haring to give back to the larger art community. Many of his public works were in locations where there were many children. He created murals and sculptures in the U.S. and Europe, in such locations as the Necker Children’s Hospital in Paris, the San Antonia Church in Pisa and the Carmine Street Swimming Pool in New York.

Haring’s distinct style and sociopolitical commentary made him one of the most respected artists of his time. Haring aimed to speak to his generation, he created a new language through art, and hoped that people would see his works and be inspired to act. “[Sculpture] has a kind of power that a painting doesn't have. You can't burn it. It would survive a nuclear blast probably. It has this permanent, real feeling that will exist much, much longer than I will ever exist, so it's a kind of immortality. All of it I guess, to a degree, is like that... All of the things that you make are a kind of quest for immortality” (K. Haring, quoted in Flash Art, March 1984, p. 22).

Haring’s sculptures owe much to the graphic lines of his paintings and drawings, but also to his broad-ranging interest in public art and performance, to his plunge into hip-hop culture, and his admiration for other sculptors such as Alexander Calder. The art historian Robert Farris Thompson described Haring’s work as an homage “to the downrockers, the electric boogie dancers, the capoeiristas, thanking them for proving to us that we were still alive” (op. cit., p. 223). As Haring himself said: “Art should be something that liberates the soul, provokes the imagination, and encourages people to go further” (K. Haring, quoted in J. Deitch, J. Gruen, Keith Haring, New York, 2008, p. 19).

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