Foyle Intercultural Festival

Boom for Real: The Late Teenage Years of Jean-Michel Basquiat

Expired April 25, 2021 9:00 PM
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Filmmaker Sara Driver’s exploration of the pre-fame years of the artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, offers a window into his life and the City of New York,1978-81, illustrating how the city, the times and the people around him informed the artist he became and shaped his vision.


A fresh perspective on the movements that touched and inspired him, as well as the influence a bankrupt, violent city had on this seminal artist, the film shows how Basquiat has become, over the years, the ultimate representation of this period, fed by its politics, the rise of both hip-hop and punk rock, race issues and the art scene itself.


In 1978, Jean-Michel was a teenager (18 years old), living on the street and sleeping on friends’ sofas in the East Village. He was shaped and formed by his friendships - those he influenced and those who influenced him. The crumbling City allowed them the freedom to discover and experiment with their work.


“(A)n unequivocal cause for celebration ... Basquiat's art - raw, inventive, socially engaged - continues to speak to us even as the artist himself cannot.” - New York Times


"Pinpoints the moment when the graffiti world pivoted, without knowing it, into the art world.” - Variety


“A treasure for those interested in Downtown New York's heyday and a demythologized Basquiat.” - John DeFore, The Hollywood Reporter

  • Year
    2017
  • Runtime
    78 minutes
  • Language
    English
  • Country
    United States
  • Rating
    PG
  • Director
    Sara Driver
  • Cast
    Alex Adler, Fab 5 Freddy, Patricia Field, Jim Jarmusch