Reflecting on my Blog

This term I sought to collate information methodically by trying to categorize my (often)  meandering thoughts and assigning different sketch books by topic. At the start of term I planned to post notes of each artist and the lectures straight to my blog.  But this stalled, as I felt the resulting information and ideas were illegible, and I found my blog software, or at least the way I use it, not compatible with multiple pictures or creativity.  

This is something I want to work on. I need to find a way to efficiently and eloquently record and present my notes and ideas.  

I find looking back through my, admittedly unstructured and borderline chaotic, notes an interesting experience.  The composition of notes, with the scribbled thoughts, arrows, sketches and ramblings bring the topic to life to me and bring on ideas and create a visual representation of my brain thinking.  I notice that these notes have a lot of movement and energy, creating a sort of visual landscape of thoughts.  

I have been inspired by various artists particularly Bedwyr William who lectured this term as well as my growing interest in incorporating text into my paintings. 

The significance of text is not uncommon in art, with artists such as Gabrielle de Punte using the power of the words  to communicate her objections to changes and lack of diversity in the art world. The physical act of writing something down can make the audience believe in it more - people can view the written word as having more credibility, especially to the modern ear with technology making it easy to create  thousands of copies, showing the power of simply expressing one's opinions and thoughts. 

I have found this term’s lectures largely directed toward installation and performance art. This is not my instinctively preferred area, but works by renowned artists such as Marina Abvohimavi and Yayoi Kasuma have emphasized the purpose and significance of the space surrounding art. They have inspired me to consider the whole experience of art. The experience starts from when you enter an art gallery, as you walk up the stairs into the gallery, for example.   The setting of a piece is significant:  what’s around it - before it and after it.  This is not something I have thought about before, but when I look back to galleries I have visited, such as for example the Tate in St Ives or Liverpool - with the glimpses of the sea as you walk from room to room -  I realise how much of an impact the surrounding  space has on the pieces. 

It has interested me as previously I viewed the surrounding space of an art piece as an element that couldn't or shouldn’t necessarily be controlled. However after learning and understanding more about installation art I view this differently.   I would like to start to utilize all spaces and areas visible to the audience. 

Installation art is meant to be transforming the perception of the space around you and i think this is a really interesting idea - and something I would potentially like to experiment with whether than be painting or sculpture.

This other-wordly experience reminds me of the work of Louise Bourgeois. I enjoyed learning of Borgeous’s work and views on  the art world. Her use of simplistic imagery struck me - I loved her ability to tell a narrative without having to over-explain anything. This was significant to me as this term I was focused on bringing a layer  of narrative to my work, but thinking about Bourgeois’ work and message I realised I was taking the aim a bit too literally resulting in me losing creativity.  It made me decide to try and focus on creating a narrative through metaphors and symbols. 

At times this term I found some lectures difficult.  I found the focus quite different to my usual painting-based world-view.  I sometimes felt a bit out of my depth, which was uncomfortable, and it made me feel at times  like an outsider.   For example, I  found Alex Frost's lecture on sculpture rather dry. Despite his interesting liberal ideals his work was predominantly focused around modern sculpture which does not usually grab my attention. I find it hard appreciating sculpture, it seems  constricted and hard to relate to. However after his lecture I went to his Q&A and did some further research online.  Thinking later about what I had come to understand of Frost’s intentions behind his work, my mindset to the possibilities of paintings becoming three dimensional which later inspired my “spread butter on your toast like you normally do” piece. 

Painting styles in artists such as Jai Chihan and Jaquia Hallum have made me reflect on my own work and reflect that my painting has become less free and more restrained.  I think this may have been the  result of my focussing on details more whereas I feel I do better  work when my work is impressionist and expressive.  It may be that I will get there, by working on the details till it is second nature, so that I can then feel free to express.  

Chuhan’s work inspired me. I admired how she built up fine layers to create a flowing overall composition with so much depth. You can also see examples of this in Hallum’s work; the pieces are assembled on top each other and rely on one another to create the overall effect. This influenced me to consider other mediums to work on, as a simple painting on a board or canvas will simply be stuck to the wall whereas using different base mediums, such as Hallum’s sheets, the possibilities are endless and bring a whole new lease of life into the art. 

Overall my experience this term has been about breaking boundaries and discovering and embracing new ideas and methods. I began this term feeling opposed to ever working or even particularly enjoying sculpture or installation works.  But I have been encouraged to put, what I now see as a narrow rather prejudiced viewpoint to one side, and to see the benefits of broadening my work out of the two-dimensional restraints of a canvas or board. I have learnt the importance of atmosphere and I have started seeing art and art galleries in a new way appreciating that the process of viewing an artwork is a piece of art itself. 

Many artists who came in to speak are  experimenting and expressing themselves in ways I had never considered. They break down this barrier against what is, and isn’t art . They have taught me to see  that art  isn't simply for beauty or as a message, the layers of what art can be are infinite and there are no rules. You cannot  block any ideas, instead you need to be open to see the art in anything and everything.

Grayson Perry

Grayson Perry is a contemporary artist, writer, all round creator and Turner prize winner. Perry is often recognised for his tapestries and pottery work as well as his flamboyant personal sense of style. When we won the Turner prize he famously said: “It's about time a transvestite potter won the Turner Prize."

Perry’s work  often depicts scenes and stories much like a storyboard or comic strip  - or even late tribal art? His ceramics do however have stylistic connections to greek pottery as well as folk art. I find that his work often depicts explicit and sexually driven scenes. His colourful, stylized work depicts a sense of innocence and positivity, contrasting with the sinister narrative.

I love Perry’s work and style. I have been to three of his exhibitions in the last few years such as “the talking heads” and “the most popular art exhibition ever!”.  I also went to see his post-Brexit map at the Bodleian Library in Oxford.  I am always in awe of the beautiful and carefully selected detail in his works and the element of storytelling every piece encapsulates. 

Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusama is a Japanese contemporary artist.  She is well known for her sculpture and installation work, but she’s also a multidisciplinary artist who creates paintings, performances, fashion, film and poetry. Her work ranges from minimalist to pop art and is often focused on feminism. 

Her work, despite being broad,  is all brought together with a repeating immersive experience for the audience - whether it be recurring patterns, intense dots or semi-abstract imagery.  . This theme within Kusama's work of almost obsessive detail or lack of, and the intense immersiveness of the installations reflect the need to escape.

Louise Borgeouis

Louise Bourgeois was a ground breaking French-American feminist sculpture, painter  and printmaker.. She is known for her large scale sculptures often reflecting motifs of sexuality, domesticity and the human form. I find her work so captivating, from the messages which are so deep set  into her pieces. She expresses forms through figurative and abstract techniques. 

Bourgeois is probably best known for spiders.   In 1947 she created two simple ink and charcoal drawings of a spider. Fifty years later, in the late 1990s, she revisited the theme,  creating various ominous spider sculptures.  Spiders are infamous, symbolizing fear, even irrational fear.  There’s a connection with Bourgeois’ past.Bourgeois’ early life was largely based around her family's tapestry restoration business. Her father was distant and so when her mother died  when Bourgeois was just twenty-two Bourgeois was abandoned.  This is a key theme in her work. This connection with the tapestry industry could suggest a metaphor for her spider works, the strings from the tapestries relating to the web of the spider relating to security and her mother’s nurturing.   This contrasts with the predatory nature of spiders connecting to the distrust of her father. 

I love the way Bourgeois expresses herself in her creations, the fluidity of her lines and naturalistic forms is both inspiring and hypnotic. 

Her work is really inspiring when it comes to my satancial interest, creating an ominous threatening art without directly making a statement.. She has the courage to allow  her work and motifs to speak for themselves. 

Marina Abramovic

Marina Abramovic is a Serbian artist known for performance art.  She is sometimes described as the grandmother of performance art. Her work is often based on exploring the limits of the body and the endless possibilities of the mind.  This can be seen through the themes of feminism, endurance and exhaustion.  She is known for pushing the limits of what we conceive about the body, mind and traditional art. 

I've found that her work is often closely connected to self-inflicted violence in some way - whether it be, cutting her skin hair or nails or physically and mentally draining herself. By doing this Abramovic highlights shunned elements of human physiology, by testing how vulnerable and aggressive humans' bodies and souls are naturally and in social situations. 

Abvomavich‘s discoveries and creations using the body as a vessel to create another ramification to art itself is revolutionary and leads us to question where does art end and begin.

Alex Frost

Alex Frost is a British contemporary artist.  He predominantly works in sculpture and drawing. His works are largely based on the difference of temporary and permanent and hunting for a successful outcome either way.  Another theme is the prevalence difference holds other us and a society. 

His art captures his optimistic and humorous take on the mundane elements of contemporary life. Highlighting the importance to stability these everyday activities bring us and how much emotional stability it brings us whilst simultaneously questioning its literal nature. 

Although I love the messages and liberal intent of Frost's work I don't feel as if I connect to the aesthetic that much, I think I like artwork to be slightly chaotic where as I personally find his  work is very straight edged. 

Gabrielle De La Punte

GABRIELLE DE LA PUNTE 

Gabrielle de la Punte is a curator, blogger, art critic and one half of ‘White Pube’ with Zarina Muhammed.  Punte created White Pube with the goal of contributing unbiased genuine and relatable critiques to art.  The contrast is that big companies and  publications  largely keep away from negative reviews, with some art critics allegedly being focused on profit. White Pube considers itself as always giving honest answers and thoughts without focus on money.   

The other key part of Gabrielle’s work is ‘fair representation’.  To some extent many ‘successful’ artists and curators come from a similar background (middle aged, middle class, male, white) which does not reflect the broad scope of artists.

Jai Chuhan

JAI CHUHAN

Jai Chuhan is an Indian-born British painter known for her expressive paintings. Chuhan’s  paintings show significant movement and fluidity between all constructs. Figures and objects freely pass through, over and under one another creating mesmerizing shapes and forms. 

A common theme for Chuhan’s work is exploring the psychological effects of love and the different levels and elements of tension between male and female sexes.

I think Chuhan displays these tensions through use of colour; she often uses bold tones perhaps expressing the strength of a single person. This colour scheme is then often matched with their complementary colours; this could be showing the strength and beauty that can happen when people come together. 

My favourite exhibition of Chuhan’s is “Refuge” at Gallery Oldham, Manchester 2008.  The exhibition focussed on refugees. The piece “Refugee Girls” has a compelling appearance and the layers of paintwork is so beautiful, free and impressionistic yet with elements of detail layered upon adding to the narrative. However the way the pieces were created is inspirational -  the exhibition was made into a safe space with Jai spending a week creating the paintings in an open studio in front of anyone whilst surrounded by sensory enhancers like light and sound.

Bedwyr Williams

Bedwyr wiliams is a Welsh artist who uses a wide range of mediums such as installations, performance, sculpture, video and text. He uses these techniques and platforms to create satirical takes on today's society. 

William’s most recent project was creating the design for the 31st pocket tube map. The London tube is a famous landmark not just in the UK but worldwide.  London is a worldwide hub which connects people and cultures together.   Williams' hand drew a man and woman connected by the iconic tube lines in blue and red. The male and female figures appear to be a small nod to the cliche of the “arty” style which has skyrocketed recently. This could be a comment on the direction the art world is going as well as the lack of originality of the new ‘indie’ or ‘individual’.The colours  blue and red are also significant, they are the UK’s national colours (from the flag) and  show patriotism.  They also comment on our new, uncertain place as a nation, following Brexit.  

My favourite pieces of Williams are his satirical drawings on his instagram account. The account is filled with drawings alongside simple yet  strong statements and texts.  There aren’t always obvious or strong connections between the text and image, despite this there is always an effective outcome and appearance. This inspired me to begin adding texts and more thoughtful titles to my own work and understand the artistic effect of using text in pieces.

Jacqui Hallum

Jacqui Hallum is a modern British painter known for her expressive and unique pieces. 

Hallum predominantly uses large scale sheets to create fluid pieces such as her exhibition; “the view from the top of the pyramid” in the Walker Gallery, Liverpool 2020. I loved this exhibition, the scale of the works encompassing the whole room or high-ceiling walls created such a freeing atmosphere. 

Hallum creates these pieces by staining and dying them with various substances such as drawing, squid and graffiti ik. She then allows these mediums to express their qualities by moving them into different areas of sunlight - this allows everything from the paint to the painting to the painter to move and adapt to each other. I love this notion of allowing nature to have elements of control over your work. 

The effect of these decaying sheets brimming with life and exuberance is a beautiful metaphor. Moreover the fineness of the sheets layering on top of one another brings a second fluid feature into the piece. The sheets  will fall differently every exhibition; different areas will be hidden or highlighted. This creates a forever changing, moving and adapting piece. 


Dan-Howard-Birt

Jacqui Hallum is a modern British painter known for her expressive and unique pieces. 

Hallum predominantly uses large scale sheets to create fluid pieces such as her exhibition; “the view from the top of the pyramid” in the Walker Gallery, Liverpool 2020. I loved this exhibition, the scale of the works encompassing the whole room or high-ceiling walls created such a freeing atmosphere. 

Hallum creates these pieces by staining and dying them with various substances such as drawing, squid and graffiti ik. She then allows these mediums to express their qualities by moving them into different areas of sunlight - this allows everything from the paint to the painting to the painter to move and adapt to each other. I love this notion of allowing nature to have elements of control over your work. 

The effect of these decaying sheets brimming with life and exuberance is a beautiful metaphor. Moreover the fineness of the sheets layering on top of one another brings a second fluid feature into the piece. The sheets  will fall differently every exhibition; different areas will be hidden or highlighted. This creates a forever changing, moving and adapting piece. 


Dan-Howard-Birt

DAN HOWARD BIRT 

Dan Howard British painter and curator whose work highlights the vulnerability of life. By recording this he immortalises the elements of life over which we  have the least control. He seems to enjoy earthly autumnal colours in his paintings, which evoke feelings of warmth and lust. His use of line contrasts from the strong geometric shapes and patterns to a more blurred and textured style. 

I love his orange series as the layers of colours and patterns intertwine so many different styles harmoniously. It has inspired me to build up more layers in my own paintings such as my 2spread your butter on your toast like you normally do” piece. 

The focus on fruit in this almost two-dimensional composition reminds me of the still life pieces by artists such as Manet or Cezanne however not in a post-impressionist style. His work combines and embraces many different art periods bringing in new perception and techniques to the classics. By doing this he opens our imagination to new ways of seeing life in the present and the  past. We look back at the old painting with fresh eyes as he takes the modern approach to classic still lifes.

Richard Creed

RICK CREED 

Richard creed is a painter known for his abstract take on the natural and unnatural world around us. His work often has geometric line merging and disappearing around the painting; I find this gives an effect of a kinetic horizon of sorts, an effect of the world moving around us. I have always been interested in the use of line to convayy mis-matched horizons or perspectives so i find looking at this work really inspiring; seeing how use of elements such as geometry can bring another dimension to a piece. 

In Creed;s work i also really like the stylistic difference within the piece, the simplified, linear shapes, puzzled together reminds me of Mondrian’s work, however, the thick swirling textures within the paint create a different story, beautifully harmonising two opposites.

Creed’s paintings inspired my “tomy has a primal urge to hit things with sticks and doesn’t understand why” as i wanted to simplify my work down similar to creeds geometric format. Therefore i boxed off certain shapes and colours in a similar style to creed’s

Development, Distribution, Production and Research- Sem2

DEVELOPMENT, DISTRIBUTION, PRODUCTION AND RESEARCH 

This term I have been trying to reinvigorate old techniques. Last term I focused on accuracy, straight-lines and scale.  This was a fun challenge but I wanted to work freely again. I decided the most freeing place to start would be studying emotions and I  let that lead the way. 

I began by doing quick line studies.  I drew people walking past me in town and my flat mates - I was interested in how their expressions changed when they had ‘zoned out’ and thought they were un-observed. These drawings relaxed my work and helped  me create pieces without obsessing about the outcome. 

This term’s drawings look unnatural -  it’s possibly my unconscious rebellion against last term’s work, when I drew lots  of ‘straight’ formal man-made items focussed on purpose.     As I worked I spent time looking at surrealist artists such as Dali and Ernst, focussing on their use of form, perspective and shape.  I found myself increasingly appreciating the unnatural in the natural and their art gave me confidence in myself.

These ideas inspired “Tommy has a primal urge to hit things with sticks and doesn't understand why”.  The name plays with its conflicting appearance and is a nod to the lack of control we often have over ourselves. I wanted to play with the piece’s initial childish appearance. The primary colours play on innocence and the bright lines suggest youth.  I created it with no planning -  I wanted to see where it took me.  But I started with the demonic placement of Tommy’s arms and eyes as, irrespective of the lack of planning, I wanted to create an element of threat. 

I thought the piece succeeded, and I decided to take the window-motif  forward into future work, using metaphorical connotations that epitomise other-ness, the outside and  a gateway for the dead.  I researched the origins and mythology around tarot cards and used this inspiration in working towards more satanic themes.   

Motivated to create my own surrealist work, my research led me to the work of the surrealist artist Kay Sage who created a lot of bleak paintings with a recurring theme of window panes and emptiness.

Intimidated by the prospect of creating my own surrealist pieces, I  started by drawing various interior still lifes from pictures I’d taken of items, or compilations I’d created.  I worked on them in a collage-technique trying to add surprising objects, colours and shading.

  This led to the creation of “The lights are on, someone is home. The lights are someone's home.”  This piece’s composition feels effective although I wasn’t happy with my technique and the tones / colours.  I was low on paint and uncertainty and the new-ness of the type of work may have contributed to its flat, rather lifeless outcome. 

“Angus concealed a lemon under the floorboards….”  was the result of my following experimentation. I loved the ‘regalness’ of the curtains added to the previous piece. I tried adding items and objects associated with the devil such as a bull’s skull and a snake. The cello was the result of a  conversation I overheard about fake-sympathy brought on by someone’s  perceived self-pity (“bring out the tiny violins”) . It made me think of the image of the devil playing a huge violin, aka, a cello.   

My final exploration of the devil was: “Fans available now. Keep cool”.  This  piece has a  graphic-design presence and I find it effective -  I think the colours work well together.  I plan to develop it into a monochrome lino-print.  The inspiration came from a conversation about my ‘sinful’ habit of binge-eating cheese and developed into a self-portrait - of kinds!

Following this I hit a dead end.  I thought again about windows, creating a simple three-colour piece inspired by Edward Hopper called “Blue Condition”. I like the effect the simplicity brings creating a feeling of emptiness and solitude in the painting. 

Empty Homes, full streets' ' was inspired by a neighbouring house.  I left the windows blank, similar to a blanked-out-eyes painting I had been working on, following the trope of eyes being the window to your soul.  Researching this led me to Yves Tanguy’s bleak paintings.  His technique intrigued me, as I struggle with the concept of a piece being ‘complete’. I found the bare emptiness of his work  compelling.  Taking inspiration and courage from this to allow emptiness into my own pieces felt liberating. 

This led to my exhibition piece, portraying relationships using manikin heads. The three-part layout alluded to classic cartoon strips. I re-interpreted my term’s recurring imagery: the pointed potted plant, wine bottle, white-washing and the manakin. Since the exhibition was on zoom I wanted to find a benefit of  the zoom format.  I edited out the middle manikin head so it flickered back,  as if you’d blinked. I liked the composition of the piece but I felt the painting lacked direction and I felt it didn’t have enough energy in the brushstrokes.  

I sought to create a (potentially-mocking) piece in response to my exhibition. I replicated some motifs (the wine bottle) and created a sad figure clutching a disproportionately-sized  bottle, reflecting me and my disappointment with my exhibition piece.  The scarf’s colour reflected  my life in Liverpool.  I think the composition is effective but the execution, less so.   

Finally, I created “Aretha could now find her way out the woods”  aiming to maintain the same whimsical elements and colours.  This image is of a joyous dancing lady in a graveyard. Half-way through the painting I took its photo, and I realised that I prefer that  to the completed piece. I need to be confident about when a piece is ‘complete’, and learn to have the courage to trust myself, and stop trying to ‘finesse’. 

This term has been about  freedom and realising that I need to trust myself, my instincts  and my art.   Next term I want to be braver, to liberate my imagination and not be bound by expectations.  I am going to free myself and let my hands do the talking.

Jean Michael-Basquait

In this essay I will be addressing and analysing the underlying themes and ideas within Basquiat's artworks, specifically ‘Cabeza’. The painting’s theme is an attack on racism.  Basquiat has an unexpected way of addressing this, through underlying themes and metaphors of oppression.  Basquiat’s work not only addresses racial injustice but also deals with police brutality and class prejudice. He critiques social prejudices and the negligence of political history through carefully chosen words and motifs, inspired from his trilingual vocabulary. He breaks down rigid categorization of types of art:  his painting technique encompasses diverse styles including tribal art, graffiti, collage and expressionism . In this essay I will address the effect Basquiat's unorthodox work and style had on the social and artistic progression of the time  and how it has become accepted over time. What was shocking at the time of creation, has now become more accepted and understood.

Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960–1988) was born in New York.  His father was born in Haiti, and his mother was a native New Yorker, but of Puerto Rican heritage.  Hence he grew up speaking French,  Spanish, French and English.  Basqiat started his artistically renowned life as a graffiti artist in New York City.  He created art that exposed his own life alongside socio-political issues such as racism, violence and greed. His inspirations were drawn from his Haitian background combined with his interpretation of 80’s New York and popular culture. Prior to recognition as an artist, Basquait and a friend Al Diaz were identified as the graffiti artists behind the SAMO© tag - this graffiti became renowned across NY for its challenging and sometimes confusing messages.  The usual explanation is that SAMO stood for ‘same old shit’, but it could also be seen it as a play on words for SAMBO, a derogatory term for people of mixed heritage. These stags topped in the mid 1980’s when Basquait identified himself as the artist behind the tag.  From this point his artistic styles can be divided into three periods: (a) 1980 to early 1982 where most of his paintings were of skeletal figures and related to death, (b) 1982 to 1985 where he focussed  on ethnic identity, and (c) the final few years before his death when he created distinctive painterly figures on plain backgrounds.

Sadly Basquit died of a heroin overdose in 1988 at the age of 27.

Basquiat was just twenty-two in 1982, when he was discovered by the New York art dealer Annina Nosei.  Annina gave Basquiat access to a studio, large canvases and high quality paint.  Before then Basquiat  had created art on the streets of East Town, New York, on any surface he could find.  1982 saw Basquiat’s shift, from little-known street artist to someone who worked in a studio, presenting his art to the world via prestigious galleries. 1982 was the year Basquiat produced his highest selling artwork, ‘untitled’ which recently sold for 110 million dollars.  Another untitled piece went for 77.3 million and ‘dustheads’ sold for 48.8 million.

Basquiat is often recognized for his unprecedented rise to fame and, shortly afterwards, his tragic downfall and death.  His work and persona were perceived as a rebellious outcast street artist, who was against the establishment and all it stood for, critiquing the rich and those in power. Therefore he faced a lot of criticism when he made the move from street to studio, giving the impression that he was leaving his roots behind him.  At around the same time graffiti was seen on the streets of New York stating that SAMO  was dead. 

The satirical copyright logos which he put on his street works  were now inside establishment galleries. He had created SAMO and used copyright symbols on his street works ironically, nobody owned his graffiti work, not even him.  He said, for example:

“SAMO FOR THE SO-CALLED AVANT-GARD; SAMO AS AN END TO POLICE”.  

This statement has now been reversed, these logos were in galleries being sold to the rich, those he had been criticising.  As Archille Bonito Oliva said: “These graffitis are an answer, an endeavour, to take back the urban space and their codes. To self manage them. Self management continues by totally upsetting the models.”  .  

But I wonder how much of a change it really was.  I have read that Basquiat used to strategically place his street art, choosing to put it in the places where artists and collectors gathered, such as  galleries and museums.  Maybe he planned his career carefully.  In 1978, the magazine “Village Voice” referred to this as his way of getting notice.

The graffitis he once used as a form of vandalism against the high end art galleries around Soho and lower east side were now transformed into paintings created and delivered, often on demand, for clients and the avant-garde market.  Basquiat explained elements of this new life as being: “like a factory, a sick factory” and he objected to being a “gallery mascot”.  He was seen to slash a roomful of his own paintings.

1982 was a significant turning point for Basquiat and accordingly, also for the world of art.  His first gallery exhibition in 1982 was called  ‘New Art, New Money’ and was received favourably by some following  great reviews  in Flash Art magazine.  The New York Times was later involved in questioning the validity of these reviews based on the investment in Basquiat's work by the  owner of Flash Art.  So potentially, this was a self-serving review. 

However it was in this exhibition that he first showed Cabeza.

The roots of ‘Cabeza’ lie in his self-identification as an African-American man enduring social injustice in America.  

The piece is a colour-screenprint from Lenox Museum Board using a Saunders 410 hot press.

The work has bright colours and bold lines. The luminous garish yellow background consumes the flat, black foreground. Basqiat’s use of colour and line links to the wider theme of color in art being an indication of difference in society, and his strong identification as a black American.  

As well as this being a reflection of Basquit’s own experience, he also provides the audience with this imagery as a “springboard to deeper truths about an individual” raising open-ended questions opposed to creating and forcing upon the viewer a single correct answer.  Different people see different things in the work, depending on their own background and perspective. 

In the work we see the rough outline of a figure with the mismatched textured background by turns overpowering and framing the figure.  The background’s texture is reminiscent of a weaving patterns or hatching - which makes me think of tribal works.  The face is also almost like a mask, hiding the real emotions, hiding his heritage just as many before have had to do. The representation of the mask is another link to his tribal interests and the figure could be displaying this in pride or representing a part of a society where that is all humans of different races are.

Another motif is the word “AOPKHES” which is branded in white on the left side of the figure’s blackened chest.  No one knows for sure what Basquit meant with this word. There are various interpretations.  It could be connected to the French word ‘apache’ which means a violent street ruffian.  This could be a reflection back to Basquit’s youth, when he may have been perceived like that. Basquiat was known for his careful and poignant choice of what some would perceive as random words. He used them to make a point, often about social justice, such as  his references to plutonium and an S in a triangle in his pictures of ‘Jesse’ and ‘Jawbone is as ass’ (only later acknowledged as a link to Superman the  Marvel Comic character).   Another interesting point with the word is the fact that slaves in America were forbidden to read, in case it caused rebelliousness.  The use of a word, that people cannot understand, could be seen as a reference to the repression of slavery, something in the consciousness of all black Americans. 

Basquiat’s interest in anatomy is present in this work.  His works often depict organs and body parts and his intertwining labyrinth of lines is reminiscent of a body’s structure of veins and arteries.  This  interest is thought to stem from his childhood, when he was in a car accident.  He broke his arm and suffered head injuries.  Whilst recovering he read ‘Gray's Anatomy’.  The blotchy colouring on the head in ‘Cabeza’ and the figure’s missing right arm could be seen as a connection to this childhood injury. The details on the figure’s chest shows this interest  - the misplaced ribcage misplaced and protruding to one side make way for the subject’s heart and organs.  This draws the audience's attention and emphasises the reality and importance of the figure’s heart.  The heart is often used in art as a symbol of emotion, and it could be a play on the heartlessness of racism. The connection between Basquiat being a child when his interest in anatomy started and the connection of innocence of children is pivotal and Basquiat is reflecting this into the figure who is in a world surrounded by unjustified power and pain.  

Furthermore in this painting Basquiat shows us the workings of us, the human race, as an art form by allowing the rib cage to be presented as a beautiful interior architecture. The blackness of the body satirically comments on the concept of black being representative of death and decay in many other works of art, whilst the contrasting yellow is a colour often used to indicate sunshine and happiness. The figure is displayed with their internal organs out -  is this an x-ray into his insides, a cruel mutilation,  or an image of him lying dead on an autopsy table. This piece is about perception and questioning our inner workings and prejudices -  how do we see this figure and what does this say about us as the viewer?

Despite Basquiat’s keen interest in anatomy the head of the person is unshaded and incomplete; the teeth are in a grimace and divide in the middle the colours becoming the negatives of each other.  On one level this is a reaction which mimics the incompleteness and re-writing that happened to Black history.   Finally, and more literally, the absent parts of this piece may be the effect of printing which is subsequently used as an ironic comment against races all being the same.  

The print is 169.5cmx154.5cm which is roughly the same size as an average man.  This gives it a powerful effect on the audience, as if the figure is standing in front of you in the same room.  This makes the issues more real, to put it bluntly, the issues in the picture, of race, money and power are right in front of the viewer ‘in their face’. 

Later Basquiat and Andy Warhol painted a collaborative piece called ‘two cabeza’.  This was a development of Basquiat’s  ‘cabeza’ drawing many similarities to the original.  For example, a division in the middle separates the two heads which is similar to the sense of division in the original and there seems to be many underlying themes relating to racism.

Cabeza is part of a collection of four prints released by the Basquiat estate representing his favourite paintings.  Basquiat refused to sell any of them. The other prints are: ‘Charles the first’ “jawbone of an ass’ and ‘rome pays off’, they were all created 1982, and they are all printworks, which was not a common medium for Basquiat.   Many criticise this development by Basquiat however it is actually what revolutionised his artwork, the creations became more directed at tackling racism, growing both in political revolts and his unique artistic style.

Contrary to expectations, the pieces he was creating following ‘New Art, New Money’  were being collected and displayed by the very people he was commenting on in his artworks.  He was arguably rebelling against the system by mocking the people who were paying him money.  

The level of visual  poetry in Basquiat’s art confused many, his scribbled words created questions which were never answered, provoking many to disassociate with his pieces and messages. We can see examples of this is ‘Cabeza’ where we can see black paint dripping down the canvas as if the figure was never given time to settle.  Some could  see this as a flaw, but others see it as a strength - and a metaphor for his race and for slavery, where people were not free to settle if they chose to do so. 

As Basquiat’s said ”The black person is the protagonist in most of my paintings. I realized that I didn't see many paintings with black people in them”. 

Basquiat’s unique style was often criticised as childish and careless. When his work was sold for sums similar to that of Picasso “He’s now in the same league as Francis Bacon and Pablo Picasso,” said the dealer Jeffrey Deitch   many questioned this idea, asking whether his  work was  as great as Picasso and Bacon,  or just as expensive?  

In an interview he told Fred Brathwaite “I want to make paintings that look as if they were made by a child”.

We can see these childish features in “Cabeza” as he ignores the lines and rejects a neatness which is expected.  Basquiat used criticism as a way of turning society on its back and questioning how people thought and what an insult means or definies. These remarks break down our preconceived opinions we have on art and society and we are given an insight into a world without propaganda or rules. 

Following an exhibition in New York in 2005, the New York Times commented “Many images resembles doodles more than they do graffiti and have an air of hieroglyphic reverie as well an electric pop. It’s impossible to locate their precise meaning, and if the larger composition is slack or slapdash, the mind’s eye quickly grows impatient, for Basquiat is an extremely uneven artist”.  

Basquiat's work, despite being sold for massive amounts was often criticized, particularly  in the UK;  Hilton Kramer included in their attack phrases such  “street-smart but otherwise invincibly ignorant” and “talentless hustler”. It appeared that Basquiat was being deliberately overlooked by the UK art establishment, with the argument that his  art was only suited to cult status in niche New York graffiti art circles. 

He also described  “The career of the late Jean-Michel Basquiat was one of the hoaxes of the 1980s art boom,” in the New York Observer and questioned the validity of the “an artist of social consciousness, dealing with greed, racism, the inhumanity of American society”.   

Through 20+ years after his death the criticism of his work persisted. This could be linked to a general  dislike for the excesses of the 1980s.  The artistic director of the MoMa was reported to say “People deal with him as a symbol of the period rather than as an artist. And the people who hate that period use him as an easy target.”

Many people saw the depth and meaning in Basquait’s early works.  They were directly addressed by  Eleanor Nairne in her Heni talk and  her curation of the  “Boom for Real” exhibition at the Barbican 

She was able to demonstrate the relevance of his work in the 21st Century.  Greg Tate, commenting on Boom for Real in GQ said “The work is just so predictive of the world that the digital age brought into being. One where everyone’s conscious is saturated all the time, with commerce, or race, or media, or drama, or tragedy, the slaughter of black bodies. All of that is going on in that work – it was work that no one else could have produced.”

Though the success of “Boom for Real”  Basquiat become a popular artist in the UK, although his work isn’t held in any public collection or gallery within the UK.

The greatness of ‘Cabeza’, as with most of Basquiat’s work, is how  eye catching and unique it is. He  broke boundaries within art by connecting styles and techniques from various cultures around the world and history.  He brought to life the lost styles of cave drawing, tribal art and imagery of masquerades and carnivals.  He stared down the face of ‘childish art” and embraced it.  This freedom of expression in the face of criticism is something many artists can never reach. Despite the foundation of graffiti and the challenges made of the excesses of the 1980’s there is still a distinct and very relevant message in his work: his representation of people being anatomically the same and  particularly his technique of striking through or scribbling over some words which in turn reinforces their importance over the words immediately visible,a paradigm we could apply to ‘Fake News’.

It’s clear to see that Cabez is a representative work from the early period of Basquiat's work.  It presents an image of the growth of young street culture into the traditional artworld and an anti racist reminder that the protagonists of this art revolution were young black Americans.

Basquiat became an icon to those consumed in racial and ethnic divisions of New York. His influence grew from the persona of leading edge graffiti artist into a rebellious artist new to the galleries. As his network grew through associations with the likes of Andy Warhol and others in the art/music industry his work became so popular, it nearly became a genre.  As we see Basquiat’s prominence and legacy grow I wonder how Basquiat himself would have reacted to it.  He wasn’t creating art to be categorised by his race but to create art. Sadly his race has always been an element of his legacy and name, presumptions clouded his work then and his actions idolised now.  In his own words, “I am not a black artist, I am an artist” .

It’s clear to see how Basquiat's unorthodox work and style has assisted in the acceptance and  popularisation of graffiti inspired art such as Banksy.  What’s the value of critical art, if no one ever sees it – and learns from it?  Today Basquiat is an integral part of culture within art to the degree that his work is becoming franchised as you see hats and hoodies being sold with the slogan “aopkhes”.

This movement in status, audience and styles is unprecedented  - he created the genre that has been taken up by Banksy.

Overall the criticisms and comments are irrelevant as Basquiat’s intentions were not to please, not even to inform but to release emotions which were being suppressed by conformity to societal norms. This conformity is something Basquiat defied, he said:  “Graffiti has a lot of rules in it as of what you can and what you can't do, and I think it's hard to make art under these conditions” . People might presume you had greater freedoms in street art, but Basquiat shows that is not the case. Throughout his works Basquiat makes us question our assumptions. 

Arguably, the more something is criticised, the greater effect the piece has created;  a piece of art with no complaints has not created enough of a statement.  An artist’s goal is to challenge and make people think.  That is what Basquiat’s persona and creations were  - a criticism of the critiques he’d been given..

Basquiat constantly struggled with the cycle of greed in power and the racism which was laid out before him.  He was now rich and disconnected from the life he once knew. Vicious greed over his paintings was growing and elements of greed were growing within himself - as the price of his art rose so did his own power struggle. Constant inhumanity and lack of diversity within this new world began to break him down and this may be echoed in ‘Cabeza’ as the body isn’t filled in, replicating his own defeating self worth. The expression of the figure, a grimace or a smile? Was Basquiat truly happy with his creations or was this expression a grimace reflecting all the new negativity to which Basquiat was now subjected. 

In conclusion I believe Basquiat's work was effective with a clean intent.  He did not shy away from confrontation and his piece ‘Cabeza’ is an example of this. His work was well defined and carefully composed.  Its intention was to change public opinion.  He broke down boundaries both artistically and in society, by moving from street art to galleries.  It remains as compelling and thought provoking today as it did twenty-seven years ago. 




Blog Essay

Overall my experience this term has been interesting,

The lectures have really opened my eyes to different ways of working, thinking and developing my own practice.

This term I have been focussing on writing notes and ideas in a mindmap style collecting my thoughts of artists, exhibitions and my own ideas. I have found this technique a lot more effective as it helps my thoughts flow more creatively as my dyslexia means  I often struggle to think sequentially. I have also found this more challenging as my writing can be messy and I have misplaced a lot of these notes so next term I will develop this technique into a more organized and productive style by categorizing these meandering thoughts. I am also considering posting my direct notes onto my blog next semester as I find the general aesthetic of these note pages interesting, the writing has a lot of movement creating a sort of visual landscape of thoughts. This reminds me of the works of Roy Claire Potter and his medium of working through speech and writing to create a flow and movement to his writings. His work is also about making an uncomfortable experience for the audience, this is similar to Ariel Schlesinger. I love Schlesinger’s work as again its purpose is to create a high sense of tension which makes a captivating and uncomfortable atmosphere. I find this theme really interesting and would like to incorporate this into my own work. My pieces are about industrialization and the definition of beauty. I am exploring this through the imagery of pylons.  Pylons are quite dominating aesthetically with their grey unnatural bodies towering over us. They are also often placed incongruously in places which, otherwise, would seem far away from the modern world. I would like to create a more uneasy display in my paintings inspired by Potter and Schlesinger. 

Patricia Mckinnon-Day’s ideas also inspired me with her thoughts on industrialization and the imagery in which she shows it, in particular, her work in Liverpool where she was commissioned to plant flowers up and down the tracks in the dis-used dockyard.  The imagery of this, with the bright yellow flowers blooming with life against the dark melancholic background, has stayed with me and spurred me to want to create more metaphorical and symbolic work. Painting styles are seen in works such as Mark Wright, and Dan Howard-Birt has made me reflect on my own work and I have realized my paintings have become a lot more restrained and less free.  I think this may be because I am focusing on fine lines and details within the complexity of pylons. However, this is not an excuse, as Mark Wright said he enjoys “-replicating the fine details” and his pieces are still free and lively. Howard-Birt’s paintings are also an inspiration as he builds up layers to create an overall composition. I tried incorporating this into my paintings however, I now see, I didn't do it sufficiently confidently.  Evaluating myself now I realize I must be more free and expressive with my work to create and develop my ideas and techniques that I am aiming for.

A stand out exhibition for me this term has been a show called “Talking Maps”.  In this, I saw maps from all different backgrounds and histories which present the importance of maps showing us not only where we are, but who we are. The maps ranged from Grayson Perry to structural examinations by scientists.  It opened my eyes to the different ways you can display a theme. From structural mazes to intricate drawings all with a common theme. It showed how differently we all think and perceive information. It was also refreshing to be reminded of how differently people think. 

 The maps proposed designs from ancient travels to new ways of communication and navigation.  The difference in approaches with the same goal was interesting and the imagery of places linking together reminded me of my own interest in pylons and another thing they symbolize. The pylons are like a map, they allow us to communicate as without the pylons and electricity and phone lines we would be isolated.  Just as we would be isolated if we were lost without a map.  

I have also been exploring the work of Rachel Lowe who I saw in Tate Liverpool.  Her piece, “a letter to an unknown person no.2” form 1996 really caught my imagination. She works in a very different way to me, with her pieces being mainly performance-based. However, this piece was a film shot through a car window as it drives down the main road.  We see her pen frantically trying to draw the outline of the scenery constantly whooshing by. This window ends up a big scribble as subsequently, you can never capture everything. But the outlines and concept are very similar to my own. She focuses on elements of scenery such as power stations and bridges over motorways and the fight against capturing the view versus the speed in which it is disappearing is really thought-provoking.

I think moving forward I need to be braver and allow myself to take more risks with my paintings and expanding my ideas.  I need to allow my work to flow similar to Lowe’s car video. I want to focus more on personifying the pylons and other motifs in my work to create a sense of a power struggle between them and the audience:  who has more control, these man-made structures which look down on humanity, or us the creators whose world would no longer function without them, or rather, it might still function - but in a completely different and unrecognizable way. My work is also to do with exploring the definition of beauty and questioning why we see these electrical structures as ugly and how beauty changes over time as a result of media stereotyping, convention and fixed mindsets.

Jorge Menna Barreto

Barreto is an artist who lives and works mainly in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. His works and interest are based on the natural world and appreciating our surroundings. His work often highlights the effects of environmental and climate issues whilst appreciating the history of the earth and its archeological and biological structure. Every element of our natural world relies on each other and that’s what his project; '“Connecting Art, Food and nature” is about.

 Barreto has recently started working in Liverpool in preparation for its 2020 Biannual.  His work is about portraying the power of the natural world and his most recent project is about making something in a city and showing how the world gives us solutions for sustainability everywhere.  Dandelions grow all around us in Liverpool completely naturally (perhaps unsurprisingly, many call them weeds….) and Barreto wanted to express the beauty of natural growth as a gift from the earth, therefore, he is in producing making dandelion ice cream, grown and made around our city. 

I have found Barreto’s work particularly interesting as I have visited his home town of Rio de Janeiro and was struck by the contrasts of the city - an industrial building so close to lush forests.

Mark Wright

Mark Wright is a painter, curator, and photographer who focuses on nature and landscapes.  He experiments with the different effects of painting compared with photography. His pieces are lively expressive renditions of our natural world and often focus on its wellbeing exploring motifs of infertile land, and the humanizing of our surroundings and the earth. 

His panting has so much movement texture and life to them whilst conveying a sense of calm and serenity.  They take glimpses of our surroundings without putting them on an unrealistic pedestal. Wright works with an appreciation for the muse “-replicating fine details” giving his pieces life and presenting the beauty and complexity of the natural world.

Wright also explores the impact photography has on today’s artistic society which is something I have always thought about as I personally confess to, what might be a prejudice,  against electronic electronics. My instinct says they limit and remove us from following our natural instincts. But I balance that with the knowledge that people said the plough would not catch on - my logical mind tells me that electronics will open a new door to explore so many new things in art through technologies which otherwise would have not been possible. 

Stephen Sultcliffe

Sutcliffe is a contemporary artist, photographer, and filmmaker who lives and works in Glasgow. His interest in film and recordings stemmed from when he was a child, and he has collected and recorded footage for over thirty years.   By saving footage that would otherwise have been lost and forgotten. people are seeing living stories which in one moment can tell us so much. As a result of Sutcliffe recording these general scripted moments, he has created a massive archive of original unexpected footage. Sutcliffe presents these clips and extracts as if they were a visual moving collage as well as using soundtracks and inspirations through literature and theatre which creates an unsettling bumpy effect for the audience.

“I am (For the Birds)” is one of Sutcliffe’s newest films, based on ‘Guy’ the gorilla from London Zoo, who died after being fed sweets as an attraction in 1978. Sutcliffe felt he has a connection with Guy  and kept a framed photo on his desk and created a film personifying Guy and putting forward relatable existential questions and statements such as;

I “and don't mind the leisure problem…but what do during working hours”

These melancholy identity and purpose questions are recurring motifs in his works which are beautifully described in varying metaphors and styles.

Mathew Merick

Merrick is a multidisciplinary artist who creates his wild ideas through performance, sculpture, collage, and sound. His work is heavily focused on the journey of a production through which his creations pass.  This happened as a result of a switch of intentions - he stopped worrying and overcomplicating his desire for his work to all be heavily politicized and allowed his own techniques and process to be a vessel for his views.

Merrick’s work has developed its own sense of humor as a result of his interest in words and speech. One of his works was based on poems. In this, he created poems and anecdotes by analyzing and exploring small elements of the world and creating tapes read by an audiobook speaker. The tapes are short and unexpected, some are being sounds and replicas of everyday life which are normally drowned out and passes us by. The removal of his voice created an intensity and disconnection to his own words and question his own meanings, feelings, and actions. The on-going series shows communications as an action whilst disassociating the voice and person.

My favorite piece by Merrick is where he connects every type of power adapter in the world to a generator that powers a single globe to light up.  This piece is bittersweet; it simultaneously shows us a connected world whilst the audience know how far away we are in reality from that utopia. It also raises issues of climate change and the effects of industrialization.  This piece is inspirational as it connects to my work which explores pylons and cables and the industrialization of connections.