one of my favorite new channels! best content/ topics ever, and your narration is fire
@debrafullerton23607 ай бұрын
He was another Genius ❤❤❤Most Artists take drugs to escape from the pressure of life or other things going on in their head 😊
@DayByeDayChristineOKArtist4 ай бұрын
❤ Thank you for your channel
@josephrapp2 жыл бұрын
Such a knowledgeable,smart,sassy and just entertaining speaker. I truly enjoy your posts and hope you get a large following.
@GreenviewStudioGallery Жыл бұрын
Tortured Soul who expressed his torment and the ugly chaos he felt and saw in the world as best he could. The heroine and mental illness only fueled a type of madness only some Artists have gone through and can relate to.
@chillzoneyt12 жыл бұрын
He reminds me of myself, I'm an artist, we have a similar name, same birthday (Dec 22), same heritage(Haitian) & similar personality. I knew of him but only recently I just randomly started digging looking into who he is and I'm seeing so much similarities..
@arthistorystorytime2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting!
@newnolohpez Жыл бұрын
Bro ur a beg
@JayDeeOfficialx Жыл бұрын
You shoot heroin too?! Lol
@k-9ines Жыл бұрын
Youre not basquiat bro 😭
@chillzoneyt1 Жыл бұрын
@@k-9ines Didnt say I was lol
@LC-fe7be Жыл бұрын
Heroin is the worst best cure for alienation from society
@mrhassell8 ай бұрын
94%-99% of adults in the US disapprove of someone trying heroin, even once. The Ultimate FU to society?
@LC-fe7be8 ай бұрын
@@mrhassell well thats not true if you include other opiates not just heroin...
@mrhassell8 ай бұрын
@@LC-fe7be Oxycodone is vile. Seeing the mess it's made, you are absolutely right.
@freeman4369 ай бұрын
Just found you. Well done. Bravo. Thank you.
@djairalert422 Жыл бұрын
Basquiat was a very interesting person, what a guy!
@kelleroper3490 Жыл бұрын
Great job! Very interesting and you brought up aspects of his life not normally discussed. Excellent, informative in succinct ❤
@arthistorystorytime Жыл бұрын
Interesting! What did you find here that you haven’t normally found discussed about him?
@valsables52997 ай бұрын
LADY U ARE MY HEROINE
@parkercroft70664 ай бұрын
You are good. Thanks for your work.
@echion-36547 ай бұрын
Ah mate you made a whole video about him, and you didn't even say during your last livestream (unless I missed it). I was still thinking about the skull painting yesterday, and am happy to find this in my feed today. Thank you, this is very informative.
@Before_my_eyes_forgetАй бұрын
People were jealous of the speed in how he worked … he was a creative genius
@megamonstercookies2 жыл бұрын
Loving this channel
@Poem-hw1xr7 ай бұрын
Love you and your channel
@ricardolinares98322 жыл бұрын
Long ago I was a substance abuse counselor in Harlem and met many heroin addicts that had been Jazz musicians and a few who had great artistic skills. What I discovered is that most developed their artistic skills as a means to make sense of their chaotic lives and sadly upon getting hooked they lost the drive to make. Art histiry makes mre noise about the mad artist and the insane artist and the addicted artist when in fact the vast majority of great art where long haulers who work and work at the craft cultivating their genius. Anyways I have known two artist in my life that did not resort to drugs. One was named Juan Gonzales (he was a realist painter of note until he died of AIDS. The other was a great poet and journalist named Gaston Baquero. Both had an open mind to the mystical nature that people will call a muse but I understand to be our inner drive to make something real out of the nothingness of truth and beauty that is in each and every human being. Drugs kills all that. Every religion started with some form of trance or magic mushroom juice that wipes out the artistic instinct and replaces it with numbness. Warhol took speed and the equivilant of MDMA and in the end it wiped out most of the potential he had for a good life. Basquait had so many demons that only heroin could numb the torment. Picasso whether it was survivors guilt or the horror that finding someone hung or a close friend blow his head off over a lover's tryst numbed his soul and in the end made him the asshole he was to almost all the women in his life. Art enobles and whether it is alcohol or drugs in the end you just get lies and ugliness that is a hack and nothing more. Think about the line of Picasso saying GREAT ARTIST STEAL. He is admitting he is a thief and a hack. All great artist make it new or invent something new altogether. Watching you expose yourself with the kinetic drawings reminded me of Karen Finley when she smeared herself with chocolate provoking misogynistic males in the audience. There was truth and beauty and an female anger that was real. Yours is less angry and as triuthful and beautiful. The yoga is also something that is more than just modern dance moves had me thinking of YABYUM. Anyways I will soon send a message via your web page and then perhaps I can share with you what I have 'invented' that may be of use. It is free and no I am not selling anything. If anything I am now simply creating for the mandala of it all. Nothing better in art than killing the buddha by demonetizing art better than Andy and Damien Hirst have monetized Vitrines and silk screened bananas that never seem to ripen to old age. I always wonder why folks are nt aware that Andy was such a creepoid he was willing to film his 'muse' overdosing on heroin. That ain't art that is just depraved indifference to life born inside the unrelenting nightmare of a speed freak attending morning mass in a place that hates the very sexuality you were born to be. I always wondered if he was abused by a priest when he was young and became the fake he was. But I digress. I hope the above has entertained you as you have had me recall more art history than I care to remember. If you are into realist painter do look up Juan Gonzalez or better if you like poetry in Spanish there is poem by my mentor and friend Gaston Baquero called MEMORIAL OF A WITNESS. It teaches the reader how to make GREAT WORKS OF ART. Just think it is all free.
@Alpha-Andromeda9 ай бұрын
You may never read this but, the same energy that calls artists to art calls them to drugs. I also know a couple of artists who only smoke weed and drink alcohol. But by and large being an artist means you are VERY SENSITIVE to the environment and to what you go through. Hence the need to work with those feelings into images and 3D creations. The obsessive ones (which is a different kind of energy) are the productive ones whose names we know. There is no way to separate likelihood of substance abuse from artistic inclinations in most artist humans. Again, because the root is the same: transcending dimensions and extreme sensibility. Drugs and art come from the same energetic root. Also spirituality is there. It’s hard to be an artist. So sensitive all the time. And life is hard. Fame sucks. So does struggling for a meal ticket. It’s possible that in the past, when life was simpler and you trained with masters as a lifestyle choice, it’s possible that you could escape substance abuse. But now, with the way life is, the only “artists” who can escape that are those posing as artists. Young people who can see the formula and are looking to replicate it. They of course are not artists, hence why Art Basel Miami for example is mostly vacuous and uninspiring. They won’t be using heroin 🥹
@DawnDavidson8 ай бұрын
@@Alpha-AndromedaAgreed about the sensitivity leading to being drawn to (ha!) both artistic expression and drug use. There may even be shared neurotransmitter underpinnings.
@touchheartyoga7 ай бұрын
There's that great use of voice, great telling
@paularnold3315 Жыл бұрын
Went to exhibit in Los Angeles yesterday. Your video helps fill in the story. Thank you.
@arthistorystorytime Жыл бұрын
Love to hear that! Glad you went.
@RudyTheInternetGod9 ай бұрын
Selling business books to artists is love🙏🏽
@threenineline12 жыл бұрын
I love these, you really put it into a way where you can almost feel like your watching that part of their life.
@arthistorystorytime2 жыл бұрын
Coming from a natural storyteller like you, that's super sweet!
@renafielding9452 жыл бұрын
I lived there in the seventies. It was rough for sure, but there was a great lovely quality to it. Definitely would have been easier had I not been strung out. I didn’t feel he was someone to watch, but rather as another struggler like us.
@arthistorystorytime2 жыл бұрын
@@renafielding945 Interesting insight. Thank you.
@sunless021528 күн бұрын
I do agree, you are stunning. ❤
@yahyachraibi-dakhama59582 жыл бұрын
At the time Jean hanged with Andy Suzanne was not his girlfriend he was dating Paige Powell !
@chipawe Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@camloff7 ай бұрын
Lovely program and presenter Stephanie.
@xanplnt42252 жыл бұрын
Underrated video
@abdelazizhamdy15982 жыл бұрын
Beautiful video
@tae_accomplish2 жыл бұрын
Interesting Content! Keep It Up!
@arthistorystorytime2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I’m writing and researching more now!
@noelbrown14252 жыл бұрын
Wow very interesting facts and what a beautiful woman you are. I'm very sad Jean Michel died at such a young age. He is one of my favorite artist. He is truly a brilliant Artist.
@Anonymous-KB9 ай бұрын
Gurl you so coool, Id def have a crush on you. Keep making cool art related vids.
@arthistorystorytime9 ай бұрын
Thank you! Will do!
@TheAverycross Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your analysis of Jean-Michel Basquiat's life and work. I'm enjoying this very much. In addition to your wealth of knowledge, your informal style of delivery makes this Storytime feel like a relaxing conversation over a cup of coffee, making anyone, me included, wanting to converse with you a little more about art. Thanks again for heightening my interest in Basquiat with your video. I wish you much success with your KZbin journey! #muchappreciated
@arthistorystorytime Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the feedback. Casual convo over coffee is exactly the vibe I'd like to have when it comes to these because that's what comes easiest to me. Glad you enjoyed!
@normapadro4206 ай бұрын
So many doors opened up. I've watched many people just give up on life. I also see a lot of people doing what ever they want. It's a choice. They know it's going to harm them, but there is no one to blame. They just do what they love.
@anthonyeaton45912 жыл бұрын
Appreciate your insights. He is one of my favorite artists. I saw one of his shows in New York featuring 150 of his paintings. Only one word - stunning! I dont think most people appreciate the scale of his works. Besides that, I wonder how much we under appreciate mental illness in the art world and what kinds of services are available to artists who may be struggling. Thank you...
@BertoBoyd8 ай бұрын
You are beautiful. Thank you algorithm for bringing me this angel!
@cedarraine7829 Жыл бұрын
Great video ❤
@arthistorystorytime Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it!!
@necrophagus99 ай бұрын
Man, I loved heroin for far too long but have been sober almost 10 years now.. careful don't let it get the best of you 😉 great video!
@looseassociation9 ай бұрын
It works when you work it
@marcusbrown198 Жыл бұрын
I was about the same as him and spent some time in New York after his death and after following his career and reading about him I have a suspicion that flavor Flav who went to high school with him probably sold him a little heroin. As years passed and actors and artist die the true stories pop up and come out .Flavor Flav hasn’t said anything yet but we know he’s in that game and we know he went to high school with him
@Alpha-Andromeda9 ай бұрын
If it hadn’t been Flavor Flav it would have been someone else. It’s Basquiat who took it. That’s who the finger points to. Or are you saying you’ve never refused to take something someone was offering? Of course you have. And so should have Basquiat. Flavor Flav was just doing his thing. Don’t be so naïve to think that if flavor Flav hadn’t offered it to him, that Basquiat would be miraculously alive and well… those who don’t want to destroy themselves don’t touch heroin.
@lesmup5487 ай бұрын
great content and a lovely presenter
@Urbankungfu612 жыл бұрын
Wonderful! This is why KZbin was created! ♥️
@arthistorystorytime2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! I’m glad you enjoyed 😁
@Urbankungfu612 жыл бұрын
@@arthistorystorytime Very much so, you can roll with the most prominent of Art critics! 🙌
@degalan26565 ай бұрын
Great
@leianahope48312 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@stefanschleps87588 ай бұрын
The biggest threat to a junkies life is not the drug, but success.
@ingridllinas56122 жыл бұрын
Interesting facts. As you said, if it wasn’t for his heroine addiction, perhaps he would had been a super star. They dye to succeed and when they get to the top, they spoil it. How come that person on the last night did not call 911 on drug abuse. It was nothing rare in the 80s! Anyway, I love his art.
@j.f.75098 ай бұрын
Another amazingly talented artist who, unfortunately, joined the club of 27...
@DIAMONDGIRL5711 ай бұрын
Everyone painted on anything during that time in Nee York. Very typical during that time.
@user-uo4ys6lb4v Жыл бұрын
love you
@fishheds2 жыл бұрын
Not quite sure how this wound up in my algorithm, but it would have been nice to actually see what the players looked like.
@orkunhasacar982011 ай бұрын
Heroine and making art goes well together...
@mrhassell8 ай бұрын
curez the pain of being dead
@reddiver7293 Жыл бұрын
There is nothing better than prescription pills to enhance my painting.
@matthewschwartz6607 Жыл бұрын
Did you ever read the book Widow Basquait?
@arthistorystorytime Жыл бұрын
Not in its entirety, but excerpts from it. Would you recommend?
@gorgeouslady5612 Жыл бұрын
All the critics love you in New York You can dance if you want to All the critics love you in New York You can dance if you want to All the critics love you in New York All the critics love you All the critics love you All the critics love you in New York It's time for a new direction It's time for SAMO to die Fourth day of November We need a Dichotomy Don't give up, I'll still love you All the critics love you in New York All the critics love you in New York All the critics love you All the critics love you All the critics love you in New York introspection don't want to quit, Basquiat got to get another hit introspection don't want to quit, Basquiat got to get another hit introspection don't want to quit, Basquiat got to get another hit introspection don't want to quit, Basquiat got to get another hit Ooh-hoo, yeah, yeah All the critics love you All the critics love you All the critics love you in New York Whattaya looking at, punk? Look out, all you Artist, you ain't as sharp as me It ain't about the tripping, but the Social commentary turn it up You can dance if you want to All the critics love you in New York All the critics love you in New York Yes, we're certain of it, he's definitely Free basing Woo! All the critics love you in New York Take a bath, Al Diaz [Chorus] All the critics love you in New York All the critics love you in New York All the critics love you in New York All the critics love you in New York In New York New York New York New York New York.
@nomadedoasfalto8 ай бұрын
Foi como tinha de ser......não há o que lamentar.....
@waynehicks19697 ай бұрын
interesting content and what a face! After writing this I noticed there are many comments that say the same thing. Oh well, not original, but honest.
@edwardduarte7393 Жыл бұрын
This makes sense. Good job. Cocaine was everywhere too.
@timcastle18448 ай бұрын
I have known many artists who believed using such mind altering drugs would assist them, in ill defined, magical way, to become great and recognised for their "Undisputed genius." Those who didn't die long ago don't produce art because their brain is so deconstructed as to leave no creativity behind.
@TheoboldJamzen2 жыл бұрын
the JulianSchnabel movie about JMB shows him smoking coke while doing art ... if so, wasnt his art more influenced by this?
@arthistorystorytime2 жыл бұрын
Right, he did do a variety of drugs while doing art and not while doing art so I think that means any of them including things like alcohol and caffeine, would have had an influence to some degree. But which drug has MORE of an influence? Who is to say? I chose to look into heroin because it was the substance that ultimately killed him.
@TheoboldJamzen2 жыл бұрын
@@arthistorystorytime Madonna says she left JMB cause of his heroin habit and that was in 1983; kzbin.info/www/bejne/gn2rlamPo6xoY6c ... (lots of musical artists use crack to write music) ... my experience with artists is they smoke coke when directly creating.
@edwardduarte7393 Жыл бұрын
Yes I also read a book about his assistant and he was super paranoid cause he was doing so much drugs.
@ftffighter7 ай бұрын
What if he'd already had it in his mind to commit suicide from the start? He just didn't want to hurt anyone until he realized that him just "living" was hurting people and then thought that suicide would stop the pain he was causing on everyone. People can be ignorant... he was using heroin for this long, hmmm I wonder if he had a physical underlying health issue? Did his friends bother to ask or figure it out?
@tonisylviamallette16019 ай бұрын
a soul who paid his dues
@glarecordings8278 Жыл бұрын
SAME-oh 🙂
@pallitin15162 жыл бұрын
Heroin is short for big dope to the blind eye omfg 😂😂😂
@lawrencevandenberg77257 ай бұрын
"and, whadd'ya get?" Ya get t' be podcast content! Whadd'ya want??
@kareymaurice3236 Жыл бұрын
He would still be upset by the commercialization of his serious paintings! (Socks) Really.
@theaardee7 ай бұрын
Can you come to my house and tell me these stories
@Malikmalo219 ай бұрын
I just got interested in art
@pallitin15162 жыл бұрын
He said smoke big dope lol - wiz
@hectornegron9155 Жыл бұрын
I loved the movie. The only thing that I could remember I didn't like was Andy Warhol's character. David Bowie could be a great singer and a well read individual, he sounds like a smart person when he talks but in this film he made a spectacle of himself, overdoing, exaggerating Warhol's gay mannerisms. Looks more like a cartoonish parody than a serious characterization of a person considered a great artist.
@augustwest3049 ай бұрын
Same Ol’ Shit ❤
@PaulRamnora2 жыл бұрын
You both look talk so classy and intelligent...I like that...makes me want to see/hear more. ;-)
@arthistorystorytime2 жыл бұрын
More on its way ☺️
@floydlowery6243 Жыл бұрын
This woman in this video is beautiful, one of the prettiest women I ever seen, well spoken with a smooth blended skin color, she know it too...go see Jean Micheal movie ''basquiat''
@scottj.46022 жыл бұрын
Samo
@larryseals46658 ай бұрын
Jean Michelle Basketcase. Robert Hughes was correct in his criticism of this "Wild Child" persona and Soho 80's graffiti art scene. Basically, Basketcase was on a highway to hell. To bad. Perhaps even Basketcase himself knew he was just the latest art fraud in those pathetic times.
Bogousness can mock heroin hipsters in turn. Karma is wicked that way. Basquait may have had a shot at being a great artist but instead he is just another commodity being traded by tax cheats and money launderers who made art more about money than truth and beauty. Your take on art beats most art historians and critics who tend to whitewash the debased depraved nature of suicidal assholes like Andy Warhole (he wanted to film Eddie Sidgewick OD) and Basquait who numbed his muse with heroin and self loathing. In time history will forget these two and maybe just maybe drugs and alcohol will no longer be attributed as stimulants of the artistic imagination but recognized as destroyers of great talents.
@arthistorystorytime2 жыл бұрын
I think drugs are often given way too much credit as being creative stimulants when they really tend to be more of a distraction, a form of procrastination.
@dimaermolenko98 Жыл бұрын
Sure ...you can be more productive without drugs. Isn't that the most important thing? Being productive... Look at you...judging artists for their substance abuse and acting as if they could have made it big without while they already made it big. I don't get how people can be so hung up in this life. Are you serious? This world is shit and there us absolutely ni reason ti not take drugs while making Art. Who would choose voluntarily to stick around this s...hole die 90+ years. What is wrong with you?!
@dimaermolenko98 Жыл бұрын
...i get it now. People like you must be really happy to be alive. Are you? Enjoying life to the fullest...huh...because it's all so nice and smells like Flowers....
@alexkatsanos84756 ай бұрын
He seems to be on the spectrum… today might he have been medicated and he wouldn’t have been the creative genius that he was?
@arthistorystorytime6 ай бұрын
Possibly? I do have a couple of friends who have said they felt numb with certain psychological medications.
@brandyvaughn12 жыл бұрын
This is how it is now 🤣
@arthistorystorytime2 жыл бұрын
Can’t argue with that lol
@pallitin15162 жыл бұрын
Humor lost its history?
@djgreenhornet2892 Жыл бұрын
Get HIGH! 😃💉
@iSee109 Жыл бұрын
SAMO pronounced SAY-MO not SAM-oh .... Basquiat pronounced Bas-Key-ahhh.... Not BAs-Key-ahtttttTTTTTT!!!
@CatLover-g7j2 жыл бұрын
I am better than he was...
@laidoffjournalist7 ай бұрын
Sorry, I can't relate. Everyone tried to help him, and he chose drugs. As for blaming racism, I call BS.
@plusfour17 ай бұрын
You're full of it. Opiates never helped anybody produce art. From the early 1800's when Coleridge was experimenting with laudanum, he found that his work was better without it. Stop promoting this.
@arthistorystorytime7 ай бұрын
You're not hearing me if you think I’m promoting opioid use.
@richardrodriguez-lj1uf9 ай бұрын
In my opinion, I think he was overrated. I respect his story on how he came up but for me, his art lacked technique. Feels like his art work was done by a 3 year old . Just saying
@arthistorystorytime9 ай бұрын
A totally valid opinion! I feel you on that. But you might be interested in a video by the Art Assignment called ‘The definition of art’ which brings up some interesting points about what does art need to have to be considered art and who gets to decide that it’s art. Worth a watch! 😊 Cheers!
@richardrodriguez-lj1uf9 ай бұрын
@@arthistorystorytime Definitely. I’ll check it out. Thank you for the recommendation
@lawilder20592 жыл бұрын
He sounds like an immature ,undisciplined, unappreciative brat. His representatives were getting him thousands and thousands of dollars and international recognition. A young artists dream. If his own family put him out then there’s more to this story. His behavior was tolerated because he was an artist whose charming street style was admired and desirable. So much more hype developed afterward because he died so young. I don’t know why our culture glorifies addicts. He wasn’t a genius. He didn’t create masterpieces. He was a young artist with a style that could be marketed.
@Ikaros232 жыл бұрын
His artworks sells for 100-200 million dollars. And his artwork are designs on all kinds of cloths. It`s you who get the world wrong. The world don`t care about your hard work and discipline if what you create only has value to you ( that don`t meen it`s worthless, but then again. It only has value in your mind) . Having good ideas and discipline don`t matter if you are not able to sell your ideas in the real world. That is your ability to influence people on a deep level. That is the difference of him and you. Even if as you say he might have been a immature, undisciplined, unappreciative brat. The world desperatly needs color and creativity. Not just another envious narcissist, who can`t understand people.
@KorpusV62 жыл бұрын
HATER???
@skyjuiceification2 жыл бұрын
Ur n0t t0taIIy wr0ng!
@akinyai2 жыл бұрын
Art is subjective so all your feeble attempts to devalue his worth is pointless. The man is obviously a neoexpression genius or his art wouldn’t have translated so well over time and across generations. Also you’re obviously blurred and over-consumed by your hate of Basquiat because if you actually studied the work you would have more to offer than the old tired "he was young, his representatives getting him recognition blah,blah.." critique. As an artist his social cues, commentary combined with the explosion of signs,symbols,poetry in his work was pure unhinged genius. But I’ll leave his own words here. "I don’t know who needs an art critic to understand art" ..
@KorpusV62 жыл бұрын
@@akinyai it's just a white man. They're all realizing how irrelevant they've always been.
@leststoner Жыл бұрын
I'm a better artist than him.
@detrickj80068 ай бұрын
1:31 So the exact same basically…
@arthistorystorytime8 ай бұрын
Lol yea good point, some things don't change. But the city has more of a polished side to it too
@DEBO5 Жыл бұрын
Ah nice so not only was he horrible at drawing but he was also a junkie!