The Museum of Modern Art ARKEN, (Denmark), presents a large special exhibition of two American art legends, Andy Warhol (1928-1987) and Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-1988). Featuring more than 65 works, the exhibition includes paintings by Warhol and Basquiat along with a wide selection of the more than 100 collaborative works that the two artists created over a short, intense period from 1983 to 1985.
Warhol and Basquiat were fixtures of the New York art scene in the mid-eighties, a time when artists, musicians and actors experimented with art, identity, sexuality and drugs. In this environment, appearances and personas were crucial to an artist’s career and key ingredients in the finished work of art. Warhol created the “scene” and Basquiat splashed onto it as a young graffiti artist shooting to stardom. Celebrated in life, they were mythologized in death. Their intense lives, great art and early deaths, are the stuff of legend.
Basquiat was infatuated with Warhol’s work already as a teenager. From 1980 on, he was a repeat visitor to Warhol’s studio, The Factory. It was Warhol’s dealer Bruno Bischofberger who suggested that the two paint together, and a unique collaboration took form. In 1983-1985, the two artists collaborated on paintings in equal dialogue. Warhol traced subjects, Basquiat painted them over, changing them and adding new elements. Work after work came into being as a conversation in colour on canvas.
The exhibition also includes examples of the paintings that Warhol and Basquiat made with a third collaborator, the Italian artist Francesco Clemente.
Date: until January 11, 2012.
Place: ARKEN - Museum of Modern Art. Skovvej 100. 2635 Ishøj. Denmark
Opening hours: from Tuesday to Sunday from 10am to 5pm. Wednesdays from 10am to 9pm.
Some of the exhibition's works can be seen in the following slideshow: