top of page

Why Basquiat’s Heads Are His Most Sought-After Works

By Shannon Lee

Portrait of Jean-Michel Basquiat paints in St. Moritz, Switzerland, 1983. Photo by Lee Jaffe. Image via Getty Images. In the past few years, there’s been a discernible, record-breaking trend developing around Jean Michel-Basquiat’s depictions of heads. In 2017, his canvas Untitled (1982) sold for an astounding $110.4 million at a Sotheby’s evening sale. At the time, it was the sixth-biggest sale ever made at auction and catapulted Basquiat into art-world immortality as the most expensive American artist ever sold on the secondary market. Japanese e-commerce billionaire Yusaku Maezawa quickly revealed himself as the buyer and sent the work on a global museum tour that started at the artist’s hometown institution, the Brooklyn Museum. Basquiat’s third-highest auction record, meanwhile, is another 1982 painting, Dustheads, which sold for $48.8 million in 2013 at Christie’s and features not one but two manically grinning skulls.

Last month, a Basquiat head broke yet another auction record at Sotheby’s. Also an untitled 1982 work, this latest sale was a drawing that sold for a hammer price of $13.1 million ($15.1 million with fees) to an online bidder, making it the auction house’s highest online sale ever. It also smashed the record for a Basquiat work on paper. Tomorrow, Christie’s will offer its own Basquiat head—an untitled work on paper from 1982 with a pre-sale estimate of $3 million to $5 million—in its global virtual sale. So what is it about these cranial works that make them such hot-ticket items?

Jean-Michel Basquiat, Untitled, 1982. Courtesy of Sotheby’s. Jean-Michel BasquiatUntitled, 1981 The Broad Art Foundation, Santa Monica

“When we look at the whole scope of his lexicon, the head really stands out as the most primal expression and has now become one of the most iconic articulations of his mastery as a painter, draftsman, and colorist,” said David Galperin, head of evening sales at Sotheby’s. The head in Maezawa’s painting is scrawled deftly onto a heavily worked, patchy azure canvas. His heavy, frenetic oilstick marks are characteristically bold and decisive, carving out a barred set of teeth and a pair of unlidded eyes that gaze out past the viewer and into infinity, like an echo of Edvard Munch’s harrowing Scream (1893).

Largely regarded as a form of self-portraiture, Basquiat’s heads are often seen as some of his most autobiographical works. “There’s a Christ-like figure that comes into a lot of Basquiats, represented by both the halo and the crown of thorns,” said Brett Gorvy of Lévy Gorvy gallery. “He’s presenting himself as both a victim and a vanquisher. That’s something that’s very present in his heads.” The gallery is currently showing an untitled Basquiat head painting from 1982 through an online viewing room and by appointment at its Hong Kong space; it is one of three large-scale works Basquiat made in a famous series exploring the image of the prophet. Another painting from the series, Untitled (Prophet I) (1982), sold at Sotheby’s in 2008 for $9.5 million.


Jean-Michel Basquiat, Untitled, 1982. Courtesy of Sotheby’s.


Jean-Michel Basquiat, Untitled, 1984. © The Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat. Photo by Kitmin Lee. Courtesy of Lévy Gorvy. One of Basquiat’s most famous head paintings is an untitled work from 1981 that is among the holdings of mega-collectors Edythe and Eli Broad’s Los Angeles museum, The Broad. Approached with the same kind of haptic intensity as his record-setting 1982 painting, the skull in the Broad collection reveals both its interior and exterior, reminiscent of anatomical drawings. Atop the head is an array of bristles that can be read as hair or, more alluringly, as an abstracted crown of thorns. While Maezawa’s head painting possesses a loud, gnashing, and confident aura, the mood of the Broads’ skull is far more subdued, or even melancholic. Given the artist’s untimely death at the age of 27, these images have a haunting and undeniably powerful presence.

Basquiat’s use of skulls is also deeply rooted in his identity as a Black artist in America. They are strongly evocative of African masks, which have been so fetishized by the art market since modernists like Picasso appropriated them from their native contexts. For Basquiat, these skulls are gestures toward cultural reclamation. They also allude to the Haitian heritage on Basquiat’s father’s side—specifically the vodou religion, which is replete with skull symbolism.


Shannon Lee is Artsy’s Associate Editor.

1 Comment


the spirit of the street artists:)

Like
Featured Posts
Recent Posts
Search By Tags
Archive
Follow Us
  • Facebook Basic Square
  • Twitter Basic Square
  • Google+ Basic Square

2023 Caribememagazine

bottom of page