NEW YORK, NY.- Phillips announced the sale of six works by Jean-Michel Basquiat from the Collection of the legendary hip hop producer Matt Dike. An acclaimed DJ and co-founder of the renowned West Coast label Delicious Vinyl, Matt Dike is widely celebrated as transforming the LA music scene within the course of a single decade through his involvement in such hits as Tone Locs Wild Thing, Young MCs Bust A Move and the Beastie Boys groundbreaking album Pauls Boutique. Over the course of his career, he developed an extraordinary friendship with Basquiat, acquiring several of his artworks. Two works from the collection will be offered in the New York Evening Sale of 20th Century & Contemporary Art on 16 May, with four works on paper being featured in the Day Sale on 15 May. Prior to the exhibition in New York from 3-15 May, the works will be on view in Los Angeles from 9-11 April. Estimated at $9-12 million, Self-Portrait leads the group and is one of the greatest self-portraits by the artist to ever be offered at auction.
Scott Nussbaum, Phillips Head of 20th Century & Contemporary Art, New York, said, This selection of works by Jean-Michel Basquiat presents a cross-section of important themes for the artist and includes the largest and most complex of the ground-breaking silhouette self-portraits Jean-Michel painted between 1982 and 1985. Showcasing the extraordinary legacy of Matt Dike, these works offer long overdue insights into the valued role he played in Basquiats life, as well as the way the city of Los Angeles provided the artist the freedom and inspiration he sought while grappling with the pressures of fame and success. We are thrilled to have the opportunity to showcase these important works of art, many of which have never been seen publicly.
A Musical Prodigy
Having moved to Los Angeles from New York in 1980, Dike transformed the L.A. music scene and the reach of hip hop at large in just ten years. His adept ear, sampling skills, and encyclopedic knowledge of music made him an extraordinary club DJ and he quickly attracted an enthusiastic following for his unique sound. It was on the strength of Dikes DJing that the impromptu parties he initiated in the mid-1980s coalesced into the notorious Power Tools club, which attracted the likes of Andy Warhol and David Bowie and featured an early West Coast performance from the Beastie Boys.
In 1987 Dike closed Power Tools and co-founded Delicious Vinyl with Michael Ross. Working from Dikes apartment, the upstart label quickly made hip hop history as the young entrepreneurs first single, Tone Loc s Wild Thing , became a radio hit. The grainy music video they produced with a budget of only $500 became an unexpected success, reaching a wider audience than they could have ever imagined. As the first of three multi-platinum singles produced by Delicious Vinyl, Wild Thing set the stage for the labels quick rise. Championing artists from the streets, Ross and Dike were highly influential in not just proving hip hops pop-crossover potential, but also launching the careers of such artists as Young MC. Dike was also a key figure in the creation of the Beastie Boys seminal 1989 album Pauls Boutique , which was recorded in Dikes apartment and is widely considered a hip hop masterpiece.
Matt Dike + Jean-Michel Basquiat
The centerpiece of Dikes remarkable collection is undoubtedly Basquiats Self-Portrait, 1982-1983, a work that not only is the most resolved self-portrait the artist created within its series, but one that also speaks of the intense bond Dike and Basquiat shared in life as in work. Dike first met Basquiat in the late 1970s at an NYU party, when the artist was still emblazoning the streets with his unique graffiti under the pseudonym SAMO; by the time they met again, he had been catapulted to unparalleled art world fame. They were reunited in 1982 when Basquiat travelled to Los Angeles for his first solo show at the Gagosian Gallery. Dikethen working at the gallery during the day and DJing at night became Basquiats designated chauffeur and eventually his assistant, becoming intimately involved in one of the greatest innovations in the artists practice the use of wood slat fencing material for his picture supports starting in late 1983.
It was during his stay in Los Angeles that Basquiat created Self-Portrait , a work that was executed on two found doors, with one depicting the artist himself and the other featuring a rich compendium of imagery and text in which Basquiat focuses on his sense of self at a key crossroads in his short career. The creation of the work was captured in progress on film by Tamra Davis, who married Mike D of the Beastie Boys and became Basquiats close friend. Davis made the footage public in 2010 with her documentary The Radiant Child , providing a rare glimpse into a work that, while mentioned anecdotally in literature, has remained unknown to the art word since its creation over three decades ago.
Self-Portrait firmly takes a prime position in the pantheon of self-portraits in Basquiats oeuvre, one that perhaps like none other is filled with self-reflection. Moreover, Basquiats act of painting is often compared to a process of exorcising his creative demons, epitomized in the present work vividly with the emblazoned words To Repel Ghosts, a phrase the artist would return to numerous times throughout his all-too-brief career. Such was the importance of these works to Matt Dike that he never loaned them for exhibition, nor considered parting with them during his lifetime.