Jean-Michel Basquiat's art reconstituted the world around him, says Boom for Real curator

The curator of a new Barbican exhibition on Jean-Michel Basquiat has selected five key works that show how the late American artist drew on a vast range of design influences – including comic books, sweet wrappers and illustrations from Gray’s Anatomy.

The exhibition titled Basquiat: Boom for Real brings together more than 100 artworks by the New York graffiti-artist-turned-painter, and is the first large-scale exhibition of his work in the UK.

Works included range from Basquiat’s early graffiti work in the late 1970s under the pseudonym SAMO© – an abbreviation of “same old, same old shit” – to his collaborations with with high-profile artists like Andy Warhol and Keith Haring.

Speaking to Dezeen, assistant curator Lotte Johnson said that you can find direct connections between Basquiat’s early work and everyday product designs, such as sweet wrappers and train tickets.

Basquiat: Boom for the real exhibition at the Barbican in London.

“He was constantly absorbing influences and references from the world around him,” she told Dezeen.

“Some of his earliest works are these amazing collages he made with artist Jennifer Stein that take materials from around the studio and off the street, and paste them onto pieces of paper and photocopy them.”

In these collages, Basquiat and Stein would take PEZ sweet wrappers, cut out the letters and rearrange them.

“They were taking graphic design – the kind of symbols and signs they saw in the world around them – and reconstituting them,” said Johnson.

Later work would include intricate allusions to iconography found in Egyptian mythology and African rock art, as well as direct references to pictorial texts such as Black Beauty, White Heat: A Pictorial History of Classic Jazz 1920-1950 and Gray’s Anatomy.

Basquiat: Boom for the real exhibition at the Barbican in London.

“He was literally lifting elements from books and translating elements into his works,” Johnson explained.

“For example, we know that Basquiat was fascinated by anatomy, he drew anatomical studies from many of his paintings and drawings – the book by Leonardo da Vinci and Gray’s Anatomy.”

Despite his relatively short career – Basquiat was just 27 when he died in 1988 – Johnson said Basquiat had “a huge impact on contemporary practitioners”.

“It is in his incredible speed of execution that the graphic representation of his work plays out,” she added. “His use of symbols and signs in this incredibly dense network – this amazing clarity has had a great influence on designers.”

Basquiat: Boom for Real is on show at London’s Barbican until 28 January 2018.

Exhibition photography is by Tristan Fewings/Getty Images.

Below, Johnson writes about five key projects featured in the exhibition:


Basquiat: Boom for the real exhibition at the Barbican in London.

Untitled, 1981
Mugrabi Collection

In 1981, Basquiat was included in the exhibition New York/New Wave at PS1 in New York – a show that featured over 100 artists, musicians and writers. Basquiat was the only artist in this exhibition to be given a prominent platform to show painting. One of the pieces he included was Untitled, made when he was just 20 years old.

The work is dominated by three striking heads, their simplified delineated outlines reminiscent of the heads that had appeared in his SAMO© tags, which he spray-painted around the streets of New York.

Variations on the name Aaron are also scrawled several times on the painting. Basquiat occasionally used Aaron as a pseudonym, which is likely a reference to Hank Aaron, the celebrated baseball player, as well as Moses’ brother Aaron, who helped free the Israelites from Egypt.

The scattered letters A and O, which also persistently appear in many of Basquiat’s works, could provide a further biblical reference to “Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end”.


Basquiat: Boom for Real exhibition at the Barbican in London.

Beat Bop record cover, Tartown Records, 1983

Basquiat designed the front and back cover for Beat Bop, a hip-hop single by American rappers Rammellzee and K-Rob and produced by Basquiat himself. Released on one-time label Tartown Records, it has an abstract sound. The syncopation of the record is reflected in Basquiat’s design for the cover, which is characteristic of his drawings from the period.

There are cartoon references – the phrase “bang” with lines and circles coming out of it – that really connect to cartoons and slapstick comedy, like Pop Eye and Crazy Cat.

The crown motif visible here has become iconic for Basquiat’s practice. One reference that we often bring to light is that in jazz tradition, jazz legends would be given monarchical titles. There is also a legacy in graffiti, where graffiti artists would crown each other’s work to ascribe status.

Basquiat would often use the crown in the context of the history of African American people in history and contemporary society too. It would then be associated with great black figures he admired, to place them back in a canon and to give them status.


Basquiat: Boom for the real exhibition at the Barbican in London.

King Zulu, 1986
MACBA Collection, Government of Catalonia long-term loan, formerly Salvador Riera Collection

Music in particular had a great influence on Basquiat’s practice. He listened to everything, from Donna Summer to Bach, though his paintings are mostly dominated by the history of black jazz musicians.

He had a collection of over 3,000 records and he would rarely work without something playing in his studio. Several books on the subject of jazz became frequent reference points. The fragments in this work, King Zulu, were sourced from the 1982 book Black Beauty, White Heat by Frank Driggs and Harris Lewine.

The title of the painting – inscribed beneath the grinning mask – relates to Louis Armstrong, who was crowned King Zulu at the Mardi Gras parade in 1949. While Armstrong deemed it a great honour, Basquiat treats the exaggerated blackface costume with a certain ambivalence.


Jesse, 1983
Courtesy of John McEnroe Gallery

This remarkable work is a direct homage to Jesse Owens, the celebrated black athlete who won four gold medals in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. His physical strength is gestured to in the many collaged anatomical drawings pasted onto the canvas.

This iteration of the Olympics was used by Hitler to promote his ideas of racial supremacy, referenced in the Nazi swastikas that appear next to Jesse Owens’ name in the painting.

Owens defied Hitler’s attempted propaganda however by setting extraordinary world records, and his incredible talent is echoed in the multiple references to Superman that appear across the canvas. These include the words “Action Comics” – the comic book series that introduced the superhero. 


Basquiat: Boom for the real exhibition at the Barbican in London.

Ishtar, 1983
Collection Ludwig, Ludwig Forum für Internationale Kunst, Aachen

Basquiat named this monumental triptych after Ishtar, the Egyptian goddess of fertility and war. He was fascinated by mythology, as evidenced by the repeated name of the goddess written on the painting.

Underneath the vivid painted sections of the work, it is evident that the background of the work is pasted with photocopied drawings, a technique that Basquiat was using in many of his paintings at this time.

In the upper left corner, a small drawing of a pig is visible, with a list that appears to have been copied from Harold Bayley’s 1912 book The Lost Language of Symbolism, which we know Basquiat owned. This is just one example of how Basquiat’s works were so rich in their source materials and in their encyclopaedic range of reference points.

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Is it possible to unclutter too much?

In a recent post, Dave wrote about the concept of Swedish Death Cleaning, which is the process of uncluttering our lives bit by bit so that when we die we don’t leave a monumental task for those who remain.

My natural minimalist tendencies are drawn to this process and I can see myself doing this naturally. My parents, however, most definitely did not ascribe to this belief, leaving us with a 4000 sq. ft. house and outbuildings full of stuff when they passed away.

And while it was a lot of work to clear out the stuff, I can’t help thinking that it was the least we as children could do for our parents who enjoyed everything they owned right up to their last days.

My parents weren’t packrats. Yes, they had mountains of stuff, but they actually used all of it. For them, the process of Swedish Death Cleaning would have been a sacrifice and a reduction of the pleasures in life. And it would have been selfish on our part to push them to unclutter and get rid of things just to make our lives easier later.

So, we are left with the question, “How much uncluttering is too much?”

I think the answer comes in the form of a couple of questions:

  • Do you use what you have?
  • Does what you have give you deep pleasure?

My husband and I often find ourselves at odds when it comes to what to keep and what to get rid of. He likes things and is very creative so comes up with brilliant ideas for re-purposing items that I think should go into the bin. We find a compromise through the two questions. If we haven’t used something in a year, out it goes. And if we hold onto something only out of a sense of obligation, or because a friend gave it to us as a gift, out it goes. What have left over still fills our house (and truth be told is more than I would hold onto if I lived alone), but everything we own has emotional or practical weight to it.

The same was true for my parents, even though what they had was at least four times more than what I have, and it would have been a cruel and unusual punishment to force them into a Swedish Death Cleaning mindset just so that we could avoid a bit of work at the end of their lives.

And now it’s your turn. Where do you believe the uncluttering line lies? Is there a limit? Can someone unclutter too much?

Post written by Alex Fayle

Japanese Puzzle Impossible

73 year old man has been trying to solve it for 10 years…(Read…)

This Headset Does VR the Correct Way

“Would you make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich without the jelly?” says the narrator in the video above rather convincingly, and I can’t help but agree with her. Seeing is believing, but try watching a movie with terrible audio quality and you immediately realize how bad your experience feels. The same goes for VR. Be it the cheap Google Cardboard, or the state-of-the-art HTC Vive, audio is given the least priority and you know what, it reminds me of something we humans have experienced before.

History repeats itself. Think back to the days of moving pictures when the Lumiere brothers invented the first moving image capturing and projecting device that began the ‘Cinema’ revolution in 1895. It was only thirty years later that sound began being incorporated into film, and the talkies were born, and no one ever watched a silent film again. VR (currently still in its formative years) is following pretty much the exact trajectory and it isn’t because of a lack of technological advancement, it’s just history repeating itself and ANMLY is trying their best to be the much needed breath-of-fresh-air.

The Model A by ANMLY is the full PB&J experience (now that analogy is stuck in my head and I can’t honestly think of a more appropriate one). Coming from Mikie Krisztal who’s made high end audio equipment for a decade, the Model A by ANMLY integrates the audio component into a VR headset beautifully, the way it’s truly meant to be. The Model A is a universal VR headset that integrates ANMLY’s high end supra-aural earpieces into the design. Made out of foam, the entire VR headset is virtually indestructible and can be placed carefully or dumped unceremoniously into any bag and carried around. Designed to fit any smartphone into its enclosure, the Model A comes with a modular design and its own earpieces that remind me a lot of AIAIAI’s TBS headphones. The earpieces have rather large 30mm drivers within them, capable of delivering incredible hi-fi audio to perfectly match your 360° video. The headset comes with an audio cable that fits right into your phone’s audio jack. They even come in lightning cable variants for the iPhone 7 and above users, making this arguably the only VR headset designed for Apple devices. I say this because the Model A comes with its own dedicated app with free content.

Modeled out of bendable non-toxic foam that fits all head sizes with remarkable ease, the Model A is completely modular and customizable. Parts can be swapped easily and ANMLY even makes larger circum-aural (around-ear) earpieces with 40mm drivers that provide a better and more isolated and immersive VR journey. At just $40 for the early-bird, the Model A is the most reasonably priced and probably the only truly immersive VR headset on the market. It’s comfortable, long-lasting, and delivers an experience that feels as emotionally and physically satisfying as a good sandwich with copious amounts of peanut butter AND jelly!

Designer: Mikie Krisztal of ANMLY

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Click here to Buy Now: $65.00 $90.00

Breathtaking Fireworks Photography by Keisuke

Chaque juillet et août, un festival de feux d’artifice appelé hanabi taikai se déroule dans tout le Japon. Le photographe Keisuke a documenté plusieurs spectacles de feux d’artifice, et comme vous pouvez voir dans les images ci-dessous, ils sont presque si beaux qu’en realité. Suivez Keisuke sur Instagram.







Design Job: Appreciate Hands-On Work? CottonImages.com is Seeking a Creative Artist with Screen Printing Experience

Our ideal candidate is a creative, self-motivated team player who can work in a fast-paced, deadline driven environment and pays close attention to detail. Having an understanding of the screen print process and techniques are needed. Knowledge of art separations for screen-printing production is a plus. CottonImages.com creates T-Shirt designs for large corporate accounts such as Disney, Carnival Cruise Lines, Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines, MSC Crociere, Cabela’s and more.

View the full design job here

DIY Anti-Magpie-Attack Bicycle Helmet Designs

Australia is plagued with a unique danger to cyclists: Magpies. It sounds like a joke, but these fiercely territorial birds will patrol the area around their nest, and if a cyclist happens to pass, the bird will swoop down and relentlessly attack the cyclist’s helmet. Here’s an example:

While the guy in the video is amused, magpie attacks are obviously quite dangerous, as startled cyclists can lose control and crash. And the swooping birds can do damage to both helmets and body parts with their beaks and claws.

Because no company has yet designed an anti-magpie bicycle helmet, Australians have had to come up with some DIY solutions. One method is to festoon one’s helmet with zip-ties:

Another solution is based on analyzing the magpies’ attack methods. They usually attack from the rear, and some think that if you place eyes or a face on the rear of your helmet, this will discourage the magpie from attacking:

A doctor in Osborne, beleaguered by magpies during his bicycle commute, designed this rather absurd contraption:

Here’s how it works:

The jury’s still out on whether any of these hacks are actually effective. If you ask me, this guy below has the only foolproof solution:

Anybody got any other ideas?

Beijing Design Week 2017: Baitasi Remade: Exploring the historic and culturally relevant neighborhood's urban planning amidst tremendous growth

Beijing Design Week 2017: Baitasi Remade


by Alessandro De Toni

In a fast-changing city like Beijing, urban planners and designers puzzle over how to preserve the remains of historical identity while improving residents’ quality of life in old neighborhoods. Round upon round of demolitions……

Continue Reading…

Welcome to Highway Heaven

From a concept to the coast road, BMW Motorrad AG and Roland Sands Design have created a truly magnificent touring bike like never before in the form of the Concept 101. With no detail overlooked, the 101 has an all-round encapsulating design that would make anyone sitting atop the saddle look mighty cool.

This BMW bike has a body, giving the appearance that looks as though the wind has cut away all along it – leaving the surface with an edgy, unorthodox look. With a great mix of complementary material choices here; walnut veneers, carbon fiber, leather, brushed and anodized aluminum – could BMW have started a new design language for the touring bike?

One thing is for sure, this bike has character. The headlights are hypnotic pulling you straight in – from there, it’s hard to pull yourself away from the thoughtful additions up and down this two-wheel dream. Undoubtedly, the Concept 101 will have people stop in their tracks and leave them with no other choice but to gaze and daydream in jealousy.

Designers: BMW Motorrad AG and Roland Sands Design

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Watch your Stress Fade Away

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Increasingly, we see a disconnect between the traditional clock with its large hands, labeled numeric values, and flat 2D faces – and a move towards non-representative forms displaying time in a soothing and calming manner much like the Magnetic Clock Blackhole by Josselin Zaigouche. This clock is much more than a simple time-telling device; the Magnetic Clock Blackhole adds an element of serenity and harmony to its surrounding environment.

These feelings are recurrent themes with Zaigouche’s work, having said that her “philosophy amounts to adding to a project a poetic dimension because, for me, poetry is the fundamental link between aestheticism and function.”

Zaigouche gained inspiration for this piece by the immensity of space while examining the Black Monolith in Stanley Kubrick’s magnificent Space Odyssey. Magnetically driven, the time is orchestrated by the revolution of three metallic balls following the grooves set out for seconds, minutes and hours. This clock is easy on the eyes and can add a sense of calm to any stressful workspace within seconds.

Designer: Josselin Zaigouche

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