JULY 26, 1986
I am sitting at the airport in Milano waiting for Juan [Rivera] to arrive from New York (Juan No. 2).
I arrived back in Milano two days ago after the Tokyo trip.
When I arrived in Tokyo I learned that Brion Gysin had died. I hope that he is safe. I sent a drawing from Tokyo that I had made to be buried with his body at the cremation ceremony last week. I found out yesterday that the person the drawing had been sent to had a mental breakdown. So who knows what happened to the drawing.
I remember Brion telling me, more than once, about how frightened he was about death for the simple reason that he pondered the possibility of having to repay for all the things he had done, said, written and painted in his life. What if God is, after all, a woman—a very angry woman?
I’m sure he’s fine. I think a lot of people learned a lot of things from Brion. Unfortunately much of his importance has gone unnoticed or at least unacknowledged. I feel lucky to have met him and enjoyed a few years of his long life. He is a legend.
Brion’s writings and especially his paintings have helped me understand myself and my work in a very important way. He was difficult to keep up with. A kind of saint from the underworld (or other-world)?
He understood my work (and life) in a way that only he could, because he lived it. His paintings give my paintings historical precedent.
He has been called the “grandfather of graffiti” because of his “writing paintings.” Crossing the gap between East and West, he turned calligraphy into a kind of surrealist writing. From his expulsion from the Surrealist group by André Breton (for being gay) to his years spent in Morocco and Paris he has been an “outsider.” Usually written out of history instead of in.
Brion sometimes complained of this sort of conspiracy of un-acknowledgement, but I think inside it was the source of a kind of private personal satisfaction. Being popular, he knew, has its drawbacks. In a way, his purity and “other-ness” was preserved and almost exalted by being “the outsider.” As usual, time will tell: He and his contributions will be respected for generations to come.
It seemed to me that Brion had done . . . everything (been everywhere) and somehow come out on top, but not knowing which end the top was on.
I will miss Brion, but I hope he lives on, in a way, through me and through the things I learned from him. If I could accomplish a portion of things he has, I would be happy.
The Watch Story
I forgot to write down the Timothy Leary watch story (or stories).
Timmy got a watch as a present from his wife, Barbara, before he had met me. Consequently, during a trip to L.A., I visited their house, after a timid invitation by Barbara. I say timid because she said she had something she wanted me to see, but was hoping I wouldn’t be mad. I was curious. It turned out she had painted their dining room table
à la
[sic] Swatch with my figures running around the top of the table. I was flattered and surprised, not angry.
Sometimes this kind of transformation is the most interesting thing for me to see. Like the “break-dancer” graffiti I saw in Milano yesterday that is in the manner of Haring. I love seeing my drawings re-drawn by admirers and making the images become part of the universally available IMAGE BANK. It makes them become an undeniable “fact.”
The Second Watch Story
Timmy tells this great story about a recent confrontation with some campus police at an over-filled lecture hall in a conservative university. The police wanted him to stop his lecture because the over-capacity crowd was a “fire hazard.” When these students rejected the idea of ending the lecture, tension started building. Timmy had to talk to the police to try to find another solution, to find a way to continue the lecture and defuse the confrontation.
Timmy was having a heated argument with the “captain” of the campus police when the policeman stopped in mid-sentence. He’d noticed Timmy’s Keith Haring watch and exclaimed, “Oh, that’s a great watch.” Timmy explains this as the “power” the watch had to catch the attention and change the mood of “even” this angry cop.
1986
Solo Exhibitions
Dag Hammarskjöld Plaza Sculpture Garden, New York City
Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Holland
Art in the Park,
Whitney Museum of American Art, Stamford, Connecticut
Galerie Daniel Templon, Paris, France
Group Exhibitions
Life in the Big City: Contemporary Artistic Responses to the Urban Experience,
Rhode Island School of Design, Providence
An American Renaissance: Painting and Sculpture Since 1940,
Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art, Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Spectrum: The Generic Figure,
The Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
Masterworks on Paper,
Galerie Barbara Farber, Amsterdam, Holland
American Art of the Eighties,
Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, Arizona
Sacred Images in Secular Art,
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City
Surrealismo,
Barbara Braathen Gallery, New York City
Gabrielle Bryars Gallery, New York City
Linda Ferris Gallery, Seattle, Washington
Vienna Biennial,
Vienna, Austria
Havana Biennial,
Havana, Cuba
Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans, Louisiana
Television’s Impact on Contemporary Art,
Queens Museum, New York
Thomas Cohn Gallery, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
The First Decade,
Freedman Gallery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Contemporary Screens: Function, Decoration, Sculpture, and Metaphor,
The Art Museum Association of America, San Francisco, California
What It Is,
Tony Shafrazi Gallery, New York City
Special Projects
Paint set on MTV during guest appearance of Duran Duran, New York City
Paint permanent murals at Mount Sinai pediatrics ward, New York City
Collaborate with Brion Gysin on
Fault Lines
Collaborate with Jenny Holzer on billboards for Vienna Festival 86, Vienna, Austria
Body-paint Grace Jones for feature film
Vamp,
Los Angeles, California
Paint 90ʹ × 90ʹ outdoor mural, Amsterdam, Holland
Children’s drawing workshop, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Holland
Open Pop Shop, retail store, 292 Lafayette Street, New York City
Create background art for Run DMC/ADIDAS tour poster
Design set for
The Legend of Lily Overstreet,
Limbo Theatre, New York City
Drawing workshop, Children’s Museum of Manhattan, New York City
Collaborate with 1,000 New York City youths on 6-story
CityKids Speak on Liberty
banner, dedicated on July 2 for Statue of Liberty centennial celebration
Create mural for Club DV8, San Francisco, California
Paint
Crack is Wack
murals, New York City
Paint permanent murals at Woodhull Hospital, Brooklyn, New York
Collaborate with Grace Jones on
I’m Not Perfect
video, Paris, France, and New York City
Paint mural at Jouets & Cie toy store, Paris, France
Paint 300ʹ mural on Berlin Wall, West Germany
Collaborate on outdoor mural with Phoenix, Arizona, schoolchildren, Washington and Adams Streets, Phoenix, Arizona
Books & Catalogues
An American Renaissance: Painting and Sculpture Since 1940.
Text: various authors (Abbeville Press, New York)
Keith Haring: Paintings, Drawings and a Vellum.
Text: Jeffrey Deitch (Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Holland)
Art After Midnight: The East Village Scene.
Text: Steven Hager (St. Martin’s Press, New York)
Input/Output.
Editors: Time-Life Books (Time-Life Books, Alexandria, Virginia)
What It Is.
Editor: Wilfried Dickhoff (Tony Shafrazi Gallery, New York)
Art in Transit
(Japanese Edition). Introduction: Henry Geldzahler; text: Keith Haring; photographs: Tseng Kwong Chi (Kawade Shobo Shinsha, Tokyo, Japan)
1987
FEBRUARY 1987
Sitting outside in shorts on a porch painted yellow and blue with blue tables and chairs with lots of flies trying to make myself start to write.
I’ve been to Brazil for three weeks already and haven’t written anything yet. I read
Neuromancer
by William Gibson and
The Autobiography of Malcolm X
and
Extermination
by Bill Burroughs and re-read Brion Gysin’s
The Last Museum
. I painted a few paintings on the walls of Kenny’s house on the beach outside of Ilheus.
And then I found out Andy Warhol had died. Since then it has been hard to think of anything else. This sort of changes my schedule.
I’ll return to New York on March 16 and go right away to Europe. To Belgium to check out the place I’m supposed to have a show in June in Knokke and then to Germany to work on sculptures in a steel factory outside of Düsseldorf (I’m supposed to be making the maquettes now) and then to Munich to put the finishing touches on the Carousel for Luna Luna, the artists’ amusement park. Then return to N.Y. in time for Andy’s memorial on April 1. Then I get to stay in N.Y. and paint a painting for Mr. Chow’s new restaurant in Kyoto and finish the sets/costumes for the dance piece with Jennifer Muller and Yoko Ono. After the opening night of that piece, April 21, I leave for Europe. Again.
[I’m going] for a group show at Beaubourg in Paris and to do a mural at a children’s hospital there and to work on the sculptures in Germany and then to Tokyo to judge a sculpture competition for Parco. Supposedly designing street signs for some new streets in Tokyo, also.
Then back to Europe or America till June 1, when I have to be on TV in Brussels or Antwerp and open a show in Antwerp on June 4. June 5, Luna Luna opens. Then stay in Europe for opening of Knokke show and sculpture project and maybe to do a mural in a building in Düsseldorf.
That is it up till July and for now that is all that is planned.
This gives me sufficient time to stay busy and keep my mind and body occupied—and keep my mind off of what is disappearing around me. After Bobby Breslau died in January, I had to start to deal with a new situation of aloneness. Bobby was always a kind of guiding (aesthetic) spirit to help keep me on the right path for the last few years. His opinion was highly regarded and I respected his taste and judgment. Ultimately it was my decision, always, but his strong opinion helped sway those decisions. There cannot be another Party of Life without Bobby, although we (Bobby, Julia Gruen and I) had already decided we wouldn’t do one this year. It changes things in a funny way. It’s kind of like a bird getting thrown out of the nest. The last few years especially have been important and challenging times to make the right choices and chart the right path. Bobby and Andy were instrumental in helping shape that path.