A Crown for the Unseen
Basquiat’s three-point crown wasn’t just a signature—it was a coronation of the overlooked and underestimated.
How Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring Forged a Friendship While Protesting the Killing of Michael Stewart – VANITY FAIR
Featured in Vanity Fair, this excerpt shows how Basquiat and Haring connected through protests over Michael Stewart’s death.
The African Soul That Powered Basquiat’s Art
Basquiat’s work carries the rhythm, memory, and spiritual codes of African heritage—alive in every line and layer.
“Where the Ferris Wheel Is by Basquiat and the Carousel by Keith Haring” – The New York Times
In 1987, Basquiat built a Ferris wheel for a surreal art carnival that vanished for decades—now, Luna Luna brought it back to turn once more.
Basquiat Meets The Weeknd: A Cover Story in Ink and Sound
A 1977 drawing by Jean-Michel Basquiat now appears on the special collector’s edition of Hurry Up Tomorrow by The Weeknd.
Basquiat’s Visual Vocabulary: Symbols That Cut Through Noise
Basquiat layered his work with codes, symbols, and language that invite interpretation. Each line, word, and shape carries cultural weight and historical memory.
The Defining Years: Notes On Five Key WorkS, BY Fred Hoffman
In this essay, Fred Hoffman explores five key works that shaped Jean-Michel Basquiat’s early rise and bold visual language, marking him as a singular force in contemporary art.
Basquiat’s three-point crown wasn’t just a signature—it was a coronation of the overlooked and underestimated.