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  • Celadon/Jean-Michel Basquiat by Rene Ricard

Celadon/Jean-Michel Basquiat by Rene Ricard

Petersburg Press

Oil on Paper

1989

Sheet Size: 40 × 26 inches

Signed

Condition: Excellent

Details — Click to read

A radiant memorial for the radiant child himself, Jean-Michel Basquiat: painted on an urn with uncharacteristic care are the initials “JMB”. On the lower edge pink cursive reads “July 12, 1989”, almost exactly a year after Basquiat’s passing. Translucent yellow emanates from the vessel. Above Ricard has written Celadon (the green-glazed porcelain which originates in China), rooting the image in history. This is a favorite visual device of Ricard, the color-referent. He writes the name of a color in a disparate hue, adjacent to the color it represents. Here “Celadon” is written in black, over a jade-green ground.

The JMB monogram is an elegant callback to Basquiat’s various graffiti “tags” of which Ricard mused: “In these autographs is the inherent pathos of the archaeological site, the cry down the vast endless track of time that “I am somebody,” on a wall in Pompeii, on a rock at Piraeus, in the subway graveyard at some future archaeological dig…” 

 

Oilstick and acrylic over silkscreen on paper

Paper 40 × 26 in. / 102 x 67 cm | Frame 46 x 32 in.  / 117 x 82 cm

Signed RR lower right in pencil

Price on Application

The Artist

Rene Ricard

In the 1980s, he wrote a series of influential essays for Artforum magazine. Having achieved stature in the art world by successfully launching the career of painter Julian Schnabel, Ricard helped bring Jean-Michel Basquiat to fame. In December 1981 he published the first major article on Basquiat, entitled “The Radiant Child,” in Artforum. Ricard also contributed art essays to numerous gallery and exhibition catalogs. Ricard was immortalized by Basquiat in the drawing entitled Rene Ricard / Axe, representing the tension that existed between the two. Andy Warhol called him “the George Sanders of the Lower East Side, the Rex Reed of the art world.”

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