
-
Extreme rains hit India's premier Darjeeling tea estates
-
Raducanu retires from opening match in Wuhan heat with dizziness
-
UK's Starmer condemns pro-Palestinian protests on Oct 7 anniversary
-
Tokyo stocks hit new record as markets extend global rally
-
Japan's Takaichi eyes expanding coalition, reports say
-
Canadian PM to visit White House to talk tariffs
-
Indonesia school collapse toll hits 67 as search ends
-
Dodgers hold off Phillies, Brewers on the brink
-
Lawrence sparks Jaguars over Chiefs in NFL thriller
-
EU channels Trump with tariffs to shield steel sector
-
Labuschagne out as Renshaw returns to Australia squad for India ODIs
-
Open AI's Fidji Simo says AI investment frenzy 'new normal,' not bubble
-
Tokyo stocks hit new record as Asian markets extend global rally
-
Computer advances and 'invisibility cloak' vie for physics Nobel
-
Nobel literature buzz tips Swiss postmodernist, Australians for prize
-
Dodgers hold off Phillies to win MLB playoff thriller
-
China exiles in Thailand lose hope, fearing Beijing's long reach
-
Israel marks October 7 anniversary as talks held to end Gaza war
-
Indians lead drop in US university visas
-
Colombia's armed groups 'expanding,' warns watchdog
-
Shhhh! California bans noisy TV commercials
-
Trump 'happy' to work with Democrats on health care, if shutdown ends
-
Trump says may invoke Insurrection Act to deploy more troops in US
-
UNESCO board backs Egyptian for chief after US row
-
Unreachable Nobel winner hiking 'off the grid'
-
Retirement or marketing gimmick? Cryptic LeBron video sets Internet buzzing
-
CAF 'absolutely confident' AFCON will go ahead in protest-hit Morocco
-
Paris stocks slide amid French political upheaval, Tokyo soars
-
EU should scrap ban on new combustion-engine sales: Merz
-
US government shutdown enters second week, no end in sight
-
World MotoGP champion Marquez to miss two races with fracture
-
Matthieu Blazy reaches for the stars in Chanel debut
-
Macron gives outgoing French PM final chance to salvage government
-
Illinois sues to block National Guard deployment in Chicago
-
Exiled Willis succeeds Dupont as Top 14 player of the season
-
Hamas and Israel open talks in Egypt under Trump's Gaza peace plan
-
Mbappe undergoing treatment for 'small niggle' at France camp: Deschamps
-
Common inhalers carry heavy climate cost, study finds
-
Madagascar president taps general for PM in bid to defuse protests
-
UEFA 'reluctantly' approves European league games in US, Australia
-
Hundreds protest in Madagascar as president to announce new premier
-
Greta Thunberg lands in Greece among Gaza flotilla activists deported from Israel
-
UNESCO board backs Egyptian ex-minister for top job: official
-
Facing confidence vote, EU chief calls for unity
-
Cash-strapped UNHCR shed 5,000 jobs this year
-
Mbappe to have 'small niggle' examined at France camp: Deschamps
-
Brazil's Lula asks Trump to remove tariffs in 'friendly' phone call
-
'Terrible' Zverev dumped out of Shanghai by France's Rinderknech
-
What are regulatory T-cells? Nobel-winning science explained
-
OpenAI signs multi-billion dollar chip deal with AMD

Basquiat-Warhol: a rare artistic duo, reunited in Paris
There are vanishingly few great collaborations in the annals of fine art. For a brief moment in the 1980s, Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat showed the world how it was done.
It started with a bang. Warhol, 54, met Basquiat, 22, for lunch in October 1982 and took a polaroid of them together.
Basquiat took it to his studio and returned just two hours later with a portrait. Warhol was stunned by its brilliance.
Soon they were working together on portraits that combined their favoured tropes: Basquiat's masks, skulls, graffiti and obscure symbols; Warhol's pop-art imagery, logos and newspaper headlines.
The brief, intense collaboration lasted from 1983 to 1985 and produced some 160 works.
An unprecedented number of them -- 70 -- have been brought together for a show at the Louis Vuitton Foundation in Paris that opens Wednesday, mostly plucked from private collections.
"It's definitely the most successful collaboration in the history of art between two great artists. It's never been matched at this level or in this short space of time," said Dieter Buchhart, the show's lead curator and a Basquiat expert.
In room after room, two different aesthetics, generations and temperaments collide -- and find an unexpected synergy.
"It is neither Warhol, nor Basquiat, but a third artist that emerges," said Suzanne Page, the museum's artistic director.
"There was a great generosity between the two. They played with and provoked each other," she told AFP. "Warhol allowed himself to be completely subverted by Basquiat's interventions."
At their best, it is hard to tell where one artist begins and the other ends, as in the monumental, 10-metre-long (33 feet) "African Masks".
Others are unexpected: "Ten Punching Bags", never shown in their lifetimes, has the bags suspended in a line and decorated with the face of Jesus Christ inspired by Leonardo da Vinci's "The Last Supper", drawn by Warhol with the word "judge" and a crown of thorns added by Basquiat.
Cartoonist Keith Haring, a close friend of both -- and who makes a cameo in the exhibition -- praised their collaboration at the time as a "conversation in painting".
But there were doubters as well. Many felt portraits should be the singular vision of an individual artist.
Their supporters saw the two artists more like great jazz musicians, riffing off each other. Basquiat was inspired by the master, Warhol was reinvigorated by his young friend.
"It released an incredible energy," said Page, and on a more straightforward level, they shared an intuitive genius for composition and combining colours.
If Basquiat was the more serious, the more socially engaged -- "carried by anger" at the invisibility of black people -- Warhol was not as detached as he sometimes came across.
"He accepted the social engagement side of Basquiat, and shared it," Page said. "Warhol was engaged too, in his own way. He was a very complex creature."
What might have been seen as insolence in Basquiat's approach -- scrawling over works that Warhol had left around his Factory studio, for example -- was totally accepted by the elder artist.
Their collaboration ended happily. But within two years both were dead -- Warhol following routine surgery and Basquiat from a heroin overdose. Already global superstars, their fame would only continue to grow.
L.Janezki--BTB