1. Self-Portrait (Monumental version)


 

Self Portrait

Medium: Painted steel
Year: 1989
Dimensions: 144x91x117 inches (365.8 x 231.1 x 297.2 cm)
Edition: 3
Artist’s Proofs: 1

Signed, numbered and dated on the base

 

Dance was a large part of the 1980s New York scene, and played a large part in Keith Haring’s life and artistic production. Although he is best known for the sociopolitical commentary in his works, the theme of dance was also incorporated into the fabric of his art making. His first encounter of combining elements of dance in his work was in 1978, when he made Video Clones, a video of Molissa Fenley, a modern dancer, where he focused solely on her foot movements. The theme of dance was also incorporated into certain drawings and paintings, such as his 1982 work Subway Drawing (Electric Boogie Dancer) and his 1987 Untitled. At times, Haring would use his friend Bill T. Jones, an accomplished dancer, as his reference in showing movement in his works.

His sculptures made during the 1980s also appropriate dance elements , some portraying actual moves of the time, such as the electric slide and the spider move. Self-Portrait, created in 1989, only a year before the artist’s untimely death at the age of 31, is a reflection of Haring in mid-dance, reflecting his passion for the music, dance and nightlife of his era. Haring’s roommate in the early 1980s, Kenny Scharf stated, “From the first moment we met, dance was very much a part of our lives. We first revolved around the B-52s. We followed them everywhere, dancing for hours. We danced space-age go-go, the jerk, [and] the pony” (K. Scharf, quoted in Keith Haring, exh. cat., Whitney Museum of American Art, 1997, p. 214). Haring gave this sculpture life, vigor and movement. The play between the two dimensionality and three dimensionality of the work makes the sculpture lose the stiff, static aspect of traditional sculpture, and thrusts it into a work truly influenced by its time.

Self-Portrait also addresses another important issue of New York in the 80s—AIDS. It carries an added meaning, one of empathy, perseverance and defiance. The AIDS epidemic had quite a large effect on the New York art scene of the 1980s, with many artists either knowing someone who had the disease or having it themselves. Being an openly gay artist addressing sociopolitical issues in his work, the fight for AIDS research and treatment was a topic close to Haring’s heart, and even more so when he was diagnosed with it in 1988. This work in many ways can be seen as a monument—a contemporary take on Rodin’s Balzac, playing with two and three dimensionality. Creating this work in his well-known simplified, childlike, cartoonish style, Haring strips this work of any individuality, despite it being his self-portrait; it is meant to be apiece that people who are also struggling with gay rights and AIDS can relate to.

Haring’s art nearing the end of his career were devoted to AIDS, as he attempted to put a human face on a disease that had taken so many, and on a topic that many people were still afraid of addressing. Self-Portrait is not a work that lamented Haring’s diagnosis and impending death. Rather, it is one that celebrates his life and passion.

It was also important to Haring to give back to the larger art community. Many of his public works were in locations where there were many children. He created murals and sculptures in the U.S. and Europe, in such locations as the Necker Children’s Hospital in Paris, the San Antonia Church in Pisa and the Carmine Street Swimming Pool in New York.

Haring’s distinct style and sociopolitical commentary made him one of the most respected artists of his time. Haring aimed to speak to his generation, he created a new language through art, and hoped that people would see his works and be inspired to act. “[Sculpture] has a kind of power that a painting doesn’t have. You can’t burn it. It would survive a nuclear blast probably. It has this permanent, real feeling that will exist much, much longer than I will ever exist, so it’s a kind of immortality. All of it I guess, to a degree, is like that… All of the things that you make are a kind of quest for immortality” (K. Haring, quoted in Flash Art, March 1984, p. 22).

Haring’s sculptures owe much to the graphic lines of his paintings and drawings, but also to his broad-ranging interest in public art and performance, to his plunge into hip-hop culture, and his admiration for other sculptors such as Alexander Calder. The art historian Robert Farris Thompson described Haring’s work as an homage “to the downrockers, the electric boogie dancers, the capoeiristas, thanking them for proving to us that we were still alive” (op. cit., p. 223). As Haring himself said: “Art should be something that liberates the soul, provokes the imagination, and encourages people to go further” (K. Haring, quoted in J. Deitch, J. Gruen, Keith Haring, New York, 2008, p. 19).

Auction Results


Christie’s New-York:13 November 2014
Estimated: USD 800,000 – 1,200,000
USD 785,000

KEITH HARING (1958-1990)
Self Portrait, 1989
Painted steel
Signed, numbered and dated ‘K. Haring 1989 1/3’ (on the base)
This work is number one from an edition of three plus one artist’s proof

 


2. Self-Portrait (Large version)


Untitled (Self Portrait)

Medium: Painted aluminum
Year: 1989
Dimensions: 94 1/2 x 58 x 79 inches (240 x 147.3 x 200.7 cm)
Edition: 5
Artist’s Proofs: 1

 

“A painting, to a degree, is still an illusion of a material. But once you cut this thing out of steel and put it up, it is a real thing…It has a kind of power that painting doesn’t have. It has this permanent, real feeling that will exist much much much longer than I will ever exist, so it’s a kind of immortality.” 

 

Soaring nearly eight feet high and frozen in ecstatic dance, Keith Haring’s Untitled (Self Portrait), 1989, offers a jubilant celebration of life. Transposing his iconic ideogram into three-dimensional form, Haring here exhibits his mastery of the sculptural medium within a period of just four years. It was at Tony Shafrazi’s suggestion that Haring ventured into the sculptural medium, taking his distinctive graphic form into the third dimension. Freely sculpting models from cardboard with a pair of scissors, Haring embraced an intuitive and self-assured hands-on approach to creating sculpture. After presenting his first free-standing sculptures at Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, in 1985, Haring agreed to collaborate with the Hans Mayer Gallery in Dusseldorf to produce his so-called Dusseldorf Sculptures, which were notably exhibited at Münster’s Skulpturen Projekte in 1987 along with the works of such stalwarts as Richard Serra and Sol Lewitt. Despite their monumentality, Haring’s sculptures maintain a similar nimbleness of line that one finds in his drawings and paintings. While clearly reflecting his graffiti-inspired idiom, these works also connect to a larger sculptural lineage that runs the spectrum of Pablo Picasso and Julio González, as well as Alexander Calder, Yves Tinguely and Claes Oldenburg.

In 1988, Haring was diagnosed with AIDS and there is a latent sense of reckoning with his own mortality in this self-portrait, arguably the most intimate of all subjects in art. Presenting us with a figure mid-dance, Untitled (Self Portrait) captures the joie-de-vivre of an artist living in the present. Haring, a regular at such legendary New York clubs as the Paradise Garage and the Mudd Club, openly acknowledged the connection of dance in his jubilant sculptures. In the face of death, Haring embraced art as a celebration of life and humanity. Created just a year before Haring passed away due to AIDS-related complications, Untitled (Self Portrait) perfectly captures Haring’s statement on the impact of sculpture.

 

Auction Results


Sotheby’s New-York: 13 November 2019
Estimated: USD 500,000 – 700,000
USD 860,000

KEITH HARING
Untitled (Self Portrait), 1989
Painted aluminum
Incised with the artist’s signature, number, date and foundry mark “K Haring 1989 4/5 acf” on the base
This work is number 4 from an edition of 5 plus 1 artist’s proof

 


3. Self-Portrait (Small version)


 

Self-Portrait

Medium: Polyurethane enamel on aluminum
Year: 1989
Dimensions: 24x14x13 inches (61 x 35.6 x 33 cm)
Edition: 10

Incised with the artist’s signature, numbered and dated on the base

 

Auction Results


Sotheby’s New-York: 17 May 2017
Estimated: USD 100,000 – 150,000
USD 162,500

KEITH HARING
Self Portrait, 1989
Polyurethane enamel on aluminum
Incised with the artist’s signature, number and date “K. Haring 89 ⊕ 2/10” on the base
This work is number 2 from an edition of 10