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JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT x Medicom Toy 'VCD' (sunglasses) Vinyl Art Figure
JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT x Medicom Toy 'VCD' (sunglasses) Vinyl Art Figure
JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT x Medicom Toy 'VCD' (sunglasses) Vinyl Art Figure
JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT x Medicom Toy 'VCD' (sunglasses) Vinyl Art Figure
JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT x Medicom Toy 'VCD' (sunglasses) Vinyl Art Figure
JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT x Medicom Toy 'VCD' (sunglasses) Vinyl Art Figure
JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT x Medicom Toy 'VCD' (sunglasses) Vinyl Art Figure
JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT x Medicom Toy 'VCD' (sunglasses) Vinyl Art Figure

JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT x Medicom Toy 'VCD' (2018) Vinyl Art Figure

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'Jean-Michel Basquiat' by Medicom Toy, 2018
From the Vinyl Collectible Dolls series.
Officially licensed figure by the Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat.
Sunglasses variant.
10 Inches (figure)
16 x 6.2 Inches (packaging)
Collectible designer vinyl art figure.
New in original, unopened header-card packaging.
Medicom Toy tamper-proof hologram decal on reverse.

ARTIST BIO

Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960 – 1988) was an American artist who rose to success during the 1980s. Regarded as one of the most influential artists of the 20th century, he was part of the Neo-expressionism movement.

Basquiat first achieved fame as part of SAMO, a graffiti duo who wrote enigmatic epigrams in the cultural hotbed of the Lower East Side of Manhattan during the late 1970s, where rap, punk, and street art coalesced into early hip-hop music culture. By the early 1980s, his paintings were being exhibited in galleries and museums internationally. At 22, he was the youngest to exhibit at the Whitney Biennial in New York. The Whitney Museum of American Art held a retrospective of his art work in 1992.

Basquiat's art focused on dichotomies such as wealth versus poverty, integration versus segregation, and inner versus outer experience. He appropriated poetry, drawing, and painting, and married text and image, abstraction, figuration, and historical information mixed with contemporary critique. He used social commentary in his paintings as a tool for introspection and for identifying with his experiences in the Black community of his time, as well as attacks on power structures and systems of racism. His visual poetics were acutely political and direct in their criticism of colonialism and support for class struggle.

Since Basquiat's death at the age of 27 from a heroin overdose in 1988, his work has steadily increased in value. At a Sotheby's auction in May 2017, Untitled, a 1982 painting by Basquiat depicting a black skull with red and yellow rivulets, sold for $110.5 million, becoming one of the most expensive paintings ever purchased. It also set a new record high for an American artist at auction.