Surface To Air: Keith Haring
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1985acrylic on fiberboard20 x 17 in
50.8 x 43.2 cm(KH_053)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1980sumi ink on paper9 x 29 in
22.9 x 73.7 cm
38 x 16 1/2 in (frame)
96.5 x 42 cm (frame)(KH_283)
©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled (FDR #5/#6), 1984Spray enamel on sheet metal55 1/8 x 204 3/4 in
140 x 520.1 cm(KH_302)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1981ink on masonite38 x 50 in
96.5 x 127 cm(KH_223)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1981signed and stamped with the date 'JAN 16 1981 KEITH HARING ©' (lower right)
ink on vellum.43 x 48 in
109.2 x 121.9 cm(KH_274)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled Subway Drawing, 1980-1982chalk on paper45 1/4 x 28 3/4 inches(KH_135)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1980-1983Chalk on paper46 x 30 inches
116.8 x 76.2 cm(KH_225)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith Haring & Eric OrrUntitled (Subway Drawing), 1980sChalk on paper45 x 29 1/4 in
114.3 x 74.3 cm(KH_301)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1983Brush in orange-red and black ink on firm wove paper
Signed and dated center bottom: 'K. Haring SEPT. 3 - 1983'38 x 49.6 in
96 x 126 cm(KH_298)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled (Subway Drawing), Unknown (ca. 1981 - 1986)Chalk on black paper86 x 45 in
218.4 x 114.3 cm(KH_204)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1984Sumi Ink on paper39 3/8 x 27 1/2 inches 47 x 35 1/4 inches (framed)(KH_140)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1981Marker on vinyl38 x 37 1/2 in
96.5 x 95.3 cm(KH_276)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1982vinyl ink on vinyl sheet
Signed "Aug 16 1982 Keith Haring" lower right77 3/4 x 73 1/4 in
197.5 x 186.1 cm(KH_202)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1984chalk on paper80 x 40 in
203.2 x 101.6 cm(KH_144)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled , 1982Sumi ink on paper19 5/8 x 27 5/8 in
49.8 x 70.2 cm(KH_220)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1983acrylic on wood11 1/8 x 26 1/2 in
28.3 x 67.3 cm(KH_041)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1982Paint on wood9 1/2 x 32 1/2 in
24.1 x 82.5 cm(KH_285)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1983Wood24 1/4 x 11 1/4 x 1 1/8 in
61.5 x 28.5 x 3 cm(KH_292)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1984Day glow acrylic on kraft paper laid on canvas without frame114 1/4 x 157 1/2 in
290 x 400.1 cm(KH_306)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1988sumi ink on rice paper24 1/2 x 34 in
62.2 x 86.4 cm(KH_258)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringTotem, 1989Wall relief cast in concrete71 7/8 x 21 1/2 x 2 in
182.6 x 54.6 x 5.1 cmEdition of 25 plus 7 AP(KH_275)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1980sChalk on paper50.70 in x 63.18 in
128.8cm x 160.5 cm(KH_226)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled (Jacket), 1988Painted leather jacket(KH_244)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled (Red Arching Figure), 1985steel and enamel50 x 17 x 18 1/2 in
127 x 43.2 x 47 cm(KH_030)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1985Enamel on steel20 x 33 1/2 x 21 1/2 in
50.8 x 85.1 x 54.6 cm(KH_295)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled (Tokyo Series IV), 1983sumi ink on orange dyed paper
Signed and dated 'K. Haring FEB 24-83' on the verso with Japanese inscription15 1/2 x 21 in
39.4 x 53.3 cm
19 1/2 x 25 3/4 in (framed)
49.5 x 65.4 cm (framed)(KH_269)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1984silver sumi ink paint on foam30 1/2 x 46 1/2 in
77.5 x 118.1 cm(KH_219)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Keith HaringUntitled, 1984silver sumi ink paint on foam47 x 35 1/2 in
119.4 x 90.2 cm(KH_217)©KEITH HARING FOUNDATION
-
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025 -
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025
-
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025 -
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025
-
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025 -
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025 -
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025 -
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025
-
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025 -
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025 -
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025 -
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025
-
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025 -
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025 -
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025 -
Surface to Air, Installation View, 2025
From 1980 onwards, New Yorkers on their way to work or to school, going about their daily routines, along with visitors to the city, tourists from the world over, encountered his art by way of his “subway drawings.” Radiant babies, barking dogs, hovering spaceships, figures riding dolphins, all rendered in white chalk on the black paper covering empty ad spaces, often commenting on the ads around them—vertical blackboards for lessons in a subterranean classroom. The platform was a public gallery where Haring asserted: anyone can understand it, everyone can enjoy it. Even after being presented in numerous gallery and museum exhibitions, Haring’s art never lost its sense of democracy, and was increasingly placed in the service of advocacy, addressing the AIDS and crack epidemics, apartheid in South Africa, nuclear proliferation, the growing threat of technology, the rise of religious intolerance, the overtaking of minds and bodies. That these issues were raised within a visual realm largely associated with joy emphasizes that joy, as endorsed by this artist over and again, is nothing less than a pure expression of freedom. We can only imagine what Haring’s art of public address would have to offer if he were here today.
The surfaces Haring enlivened include sheet metal, masonite, wood, rice paper, glass, Plexiglas, vinyl tarps, foam, and walls, including a mural for the Berlin Wall, even the human body—that of choreographer Bill T. Jones and the singer Grace Jones famously, each transformed into living sculpture. An idea of fluid movement, the dance of bold lines, whether angular or sinuous, and the choreography of a composition, is central to Haring’s work, consistent from the very beginning. To paint and draw was to perform. Once completed, although the work was done, the images continued to perform. Bodies pass through permeable bodies. There is uplift and buoyancy, and “everything that rises must converge.” One of the earlier works here, Untitled, May 23, 1981, features a dark human form in silhouette high above the raised arms of a half dozen figures who have sent it airborne, ready to catch it upon its fall: an image of flight and suspended animation. Among other works on view are two foam figures from 1984, with outstretched capes or wings, originally created for the New York nightclub The Peppermint Lounge. Many from the early ’80s are breakdancers defying gravity. An upside-down figure in one subway drawing appears to be somersaulting over another. In a recurrent image from this period, two figures are seen racing to the top of a pyramid. In an untitled work from Haring’s Tokyo Series, 1983, a seated figure with an ankh, the Egyptian symbol of eternal life, between its legs, appears to be attempting levitation. While every image is fixed, set flat to its surface, the implication of bodies in motion abounds, the artist’s first of all.
When we consider painting as performance, the artist who likely comes to mind—by way of a well-known short film of him—is Jackson Pollock, with whom we identify the animated all-over composition and the artist as a presence forever hovering above and before his work (1). Haring, born two years after Pollock’s death, is also present in everything he left behind, most intensely in his own all-over compositions, where puzzle-like pieces intricately interlock, in works both large and small. An untitled drawing from 1988, measuring twenty-four by thirty-four inches, barely contains the density of energy packed tightly into its frame. A vinyl tarp measuring more than six feet square, filled from edge to edge with canary yellow lines on a fire engine red ground, black dots and dashes optically charging the composition, appears entirely electrified. Here, we fully appreciate Haring’s power of immediate communication in direct relation to his deceptive virtuosity as a colorist. Chromatic contrast amplifies and defines works where he places cherry red figures in motion on a lime green ground, giving great presence to a modestly sized image, one that easily projects across the space of the gallery. Elsewhere, Haring plays jet black against bright yellow, and red off black. With drawings, Haring’s choice of paper was equally well considered: Sumi ink on orange dyed paper, and on delicate baby blue sheets. Graphic and calligraphic, the palpable pulse in Haring’s art, its aliveness, is equally evident in works that are intimate and those engaging public space—the ultimate stage—and thus engaging public consciousness.
Among its major works, this show includes two sections of Haring’s ambitious FDR Drive frieze (1984), each nearly nine feet wide, spray enamel on sheet metal. The original work comprised about thirty panels spanning more than two hundred feet. Installed along the parkway tracing the city’s east side, it was seen daily by motorists—bodies at rest or in motion, depending on traffic flow. This was art as a drive-by movie, an animated cartoon. Two years prior, Haring had created the Houston/Bowery mural, flanked at the top by his signature triple-eyed smiling face, a line of inverted (radioactive?) dancing figures between them, a pair of atomic nuclear symbols and running figures below, immersed in the glow of fluorescent color. For two months, cars, buses, cyclists and pedestrians passed by daily. If Haring understood anything about the reception of his work, it was that the audience could be anyone, whoever we are, wherever we’re from, wherever we’re going. His art, he himself, his city, his audience in perpetual motion. We still are.
—Bob Nickas
(1) In 1951, the Swiss photographer Hans Namuth made a short film of Jackson Pollock as he created a painting on a sheet of glass, set up so that Namuth and his camera would be positioned below, allowing for a “painting’s eye view” as it came into being.
