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Widow basquiat by jennifer clement
Widow basquiat by jennifer clement









widow basquiat by jennifer clement

I know no more perfect portrait of artist and muse. The surreal rise and fall of an American genius. We sift through the wreckage of their not-quite-conjugal bed as we hurtle toward Jean-Michel’s impending demise. Suzanne, her amour is fou, bears witness to it all. Because this book is also about the wages of fame. sprinkling water on the floors of the Museum of Modern Art like a voodoo priest, sprinkling fresh hundred dollars bills on the Bowery from the window of a limousine, too. Widow Basquiat’s action is vivid you see and hear the thwack and clack of an angry fist, the snort of a hit, the sweet patter of Jean-Michel speaking Spanish (‘tu eres blanca como el arroz’), prank calls to a suicide hotline that verge on Beckettian, J.M. We also know he liked to fuck with white people’s racism. We know from Suzanne that he liked extravagant costumery, too – chic Armani suits to paint in and ersatz African garb for fancy openings. We know from Suzanne that he liked to walk around naked. She stares out from the cover of the US edition of the book – feline features, alabastrine skin and pouty lips – her arm wrapped around Jean-Michel, who wears an embroidered skullcap in the Muslim tradition (why?). It’s the widow, a sensitive runaway who keeps heroin tucked inside her beehive hair, who provides the material for Clement’s misfit text a slim, staccato narrative about the lovers’ polychromatic adventures, accented by bits of oral history in Suzanne’s voice. Rene Ricard, the flamboyant downtown flâneur who flits through this tale, plays both consigliere and Cassandra, for he bestows upon Suzanne the ‘widow’ sobriquet – this, long before her lover is long gone. It’s the most revealing glimpse of Jean-Michel Basquiat I know of – he, the product of Haitian and Puerto Rican parentage who all-too-briefly stalked this earth, crashing the white world of the white cube, only to be toasted with champagne like an over-performing circus animal.Īn idiosyncratic collaboration between the poet Jennifer Clement and Mallouk, a Palestinian-Canadian ingenue and Basquiat’s first great love, Widow reads and feels like a prose poem. Widow Basquiat (2000) is an irreverent animal, a hybrid text, at once a collage and an opera. They’re two wounded souls moving through the gentrifying streets of downtown New York in the company of hobos and bohemians and hungry art dealers named Anina, Mary, Larry. So is her sinewy, coke-addled lover, Jean-Michel.

widow basquiat by jennifer clement

Even before her father threw her down the stairs, she was bathing in it. ‘If you’d never hit me, I wouldn’t know my skeleton.’ Suzanne Mallouk knows that the other side of eros is pathos. Jean-Michel Basquiat with Suzanne Mallouk, 1981. Part of frieze magazine’s 200th issue.

widow basquiat by jennifer clement

A most interesting, moving and beautiful book.











Widow basquiat by jennifer clement