Crown of Chaos
60×48 in
Oil on canvas
This painting of Jean-Michel Basquiat is an ode to brilliance under pressure. His eyes are sharp, his hands folded like shields, and the strokes of color across his skin feel like scars of expression—raw, deliberate, unstoppable. The green backdrop hums like static, as if the air around him is alive with unspoken ideas.
At just 6 years old, Basquiat was struck by a car and hospitalized with a broken arm and internal injuries. While recovering, his mother gifted him a copy of Gray’s Anatomy. That book would go on to shape his visual language—his obsession with the human body, skeletons, and the relationship between life and decay.
60×48 in
Oil on canvas
This painting of Jean-Michel Basquiat is an ode to brilliance under pressure. His eyes are sharp, his hands folded like shields, and the strokes of color across his skin feel like scars of expression—raw, deliberate, unstoppable. The green backdrop hums like static, as if the air around him is alive with unspoken ideas.
At just 6 years old, Basquiat was struck by a car and hospitalized with a broken arm and internal injuries. While recovering, his mother gifted him a copy of Gray’s Anatomy. That book would go on to shape his visual language—his obsession with the human body, skeletons, and the relationship between life and decay.
60×48 in
Oil on canvas
This painting of Jean-Michel Basquiat is an ode to brilliance under pressure. His eyes are sharp, his hands folded like shields, and the strokes of color across his skin feel like scars of expression—raw, deliberate, unstoppable. The green backdrop hums like static, as if the air around him is alive with unspoken ideas.
At just 6 years old, Basquiat was struck by a car and hospitalized with a broken arm and internal injuries. While recovering, his mother gifted him a copy of Gray’s Anatomy. That book would go on to shape his visual language—his obsession with the human body, skeletons, and the relationship between life and decay.