
KEITH HARING
The Garden of Radio Delight/The Beach (double-sided), 1984
Acrylic on tarp, double-sided
75 1/2 x 187 7/8 inches (191.8 x 477.5 cm)
Provenance
Collection of Bill T. Jones, New York (acquired directly from the artist)
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Auction History
Phillips London: 27 June 2024
Estimated: GBP 400,000 – 600,000
GBP 317,500 / USD 402,590
Keith Haring – Modern & Contemporary Ar… Lot 16 June 2024 | Phillips
This work is 1 of 2 unique tarps created for the Bill T. Jones / Arnie Zane Dance Company’s production of Secret Pasture which premiered at the Brooklyn Academy of Music on 15 November 1984.
Emphasizing form, vitality, and unrestrained movement, Keith Haring’s iconographic compositions generate their own mode of visual choreography, their repeating motifs and pronounced internal rhythms closely aligned to musical pattern and the embodied power of dance and performance. Although these elements had been well-established in the artist’s work before the 1890s, Haring’s first meeting with the legendary choreographer and dancer Bill T. Jones and his partner Arnie Zane proved to be decisive, allowing him to harness the dynamic energy of his practice and harness its collaborative potential. Executed in 1984 on an enormous, immersive scale as part of Haring’s stage designs for Secret Pastures, The Garden of Radio Delight/The Beach is a record of this friendship, and the interdisciplinary collaborations produced by Haring, Jones, and Zane during this fruitful period.

The year before the present work’s execution, Haring had infamously painted Jones’ entire body in the simplified, bold patterns that had become synonymous with the artist’s unmistakable visual style found across his subway graffiti, designs, and immersive environments. Capturing the spirit of sexual liberation, freedom of expression, and provocative challenges to established discussions between so-called high and low culture that best characterized the era, Haring approached Jones with the idea for the project to coincide with the opening of his exhibition at Fraser Gallery in London. While the event itself shocked audiences, the documentation of this performance in film by Arnie Zane and in a series of photographs by Tseng Kwong Chi continued to reverberate and define an era, forming the basis of a second exhibition at Tony Shafrazi Gallery, and going on to become one of the most iconic and reproduced images of the 1980s.

Following a non-linear narrative focused on the divide between modern and more primitive modes of experience and exploring themes related to race, politics, economics, and sexuality, Secret Pastures was commissioned by the Brooklyn Academy of Music and premiered by The Bill T. Jones / Arnie Zane Dance Company in the November of that year. A truly immersive, collaborative project, the 90-minute performance set Jones and Zane’s choreography against a score by art-rock composer Peter Gordon and his Love of Life Orchestra, blending Haring’s set designs with androgynous costumes by Smith and striking hair and makeup by Marcel Fieve. Undermining stereotypes related to gender and race, the performance featured Jones and Zane as the ‘fabricated man’ and ‘professor’ respectively, alongside a further eleven ensemble characters executing ‘angular, sharp, and sexually evocative movements, punctuating Gordon’s percussive, punk-inflected score and Haring’s iconographic homoerotic drawings on stage.’

Reimaging artistic collaboration as a radical mode of artistic freedom and expanding notions of embodiment, experience, and culture, Haring’s stage designs for Secret Pastures were critically praised, although the artist would only go on to produce one more major work for a theatrical performance, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, produced in the same year. Bold, brightly colored, and full of vitality, The Garden of Radio Delight/The Beach not only represents a major work by the artist at the peak of his career, but documents an important artistic moment in the 1980s, embodying the radically collaborative, punk spirit at the heart of these performances.