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    Sotheby's finds hidden signature on Basquiat work

    LONDON (AP) — Thirty years ago, artist Jean-Michel Basquiat secretly signed one of his paintings in invisible ink, says Sotheby's auction house, which discovered the hidden autograph as it was preparing the painting for sale.

    Sotheby's experts uncovered the secret this month as they were examining "Orange Sports Figure," which goes on sale Wednesday. The vibrant image of an abstract crowned figure is estimated to be worth between 3 million pounds and 4 million pounds ($4.7 million and $6.3 million).

    Basquiat, a graffiti artist who became a 1980s art star, signed relatively few of his canvasses. But Sotheby's said ultraviolet light revealed the artist's name and the date 1982 beneath the work's layers of acrylic and spray paint.

    "The signature just popped out," Cheyenne Westphal, head of contemporary art at Sotheby's Europe, said Tuesday.

    She said staff were initially "surprised, astonished and puzzled" by the signature, which appears to have been written in the type of pen used to mark banknotes.

    "Nobody else probably ever knew about this invisible inscription, and the prospect that he might have left other invisible writings on his canvasses that are only visible under ultraviolet light is very exciting," she said.

    Westphal said she knew of no other invisible signature on a Basquiat work.

    Basquiat's paintings are often covered in words and doodles. He signed some paintings with a crown, others with his graffiti alter ego SAMO — but relatively few with his full name.

    The son of a Haitian father and Puerto Rican mother, Brooklyn-raised Basquiat developed a vibrant style influenced by Picasso and the Abstract Expressionists as well as by the work of street graffiti artists.

    His works celebrate icons of black culture, from athletes like Muhammad Ali and Hank Aaron to musicians like Miles Davis and Charlie Parker, and often allude to the legacy of slavery and colonialism.

    Basquiat's reputation has soared since his death from a drug overdose in 1988 at the age of 27. "Untitled" sold for $14.6 million at Sotheby's in 2007, and "Untitled (Boxer)" sold for $13.5 million in New York in 2008.

    "Orange Sports Figure" is part of Sotheby's contemporary art sale in London on Wednesday.

    Westphal said the auction house had not revised the work's estimated sale price in light of the discovery.

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    22 comments

    • Go AZ  •  3 months ago
      6 million?
      Notice how these wealthy 'art collectors' never live in areas where they could see this 'art' for free everyday on the buildings, bridges, and hallways where they live?
    • michael d  •  3 months ago
      I live in a city with several galleries. Some of the "artists" admit to me that some customers would buy excrement if it was signed and had a high enough price tag.
    • Leslie  •  Encino, United States  •  3 months ago
      4 million pounds? For that? HaHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! Wow, I'm in the wrong business.
    • C.G.  •  Basin, United States  •  3 months ago
      That crap is art, people are retarded
    • love1  •  Lake Charles, United States  •  3 months ago
      "Untitled" sold for $14.6 million at Sotheby's in 2007, and "Untitled (Boxer)" sold for $13.5 million in New York in 2008."

      ---Just don't sign the check with invisible ink, eh?
      • Mickey 3 months ago
        Derrrrn TOOTIN".
    • ts  •  3 months ago
      how convenient...Is it worth more now?
    • Chippy  •  Phoenix, United States  •  3 months ago
      If this is art; I'm a brain surgeon.
    • clarence  •  Crystal Lake, United States  •  3 months ago
      Sick!
    • You're No Fun  •  3 months ago
      All that money, for a painting of Bart Simpson.
    • Rick S  •  3 months ago
      He should have peed his signature on them, they would show up with blacklight as well. Now THAT's graffiti!
    • Leeroy  •  Neenah, United States  •  3 months ago
      I gotta get into this racket. Stuff that looks like it's hanging on a mommy's fridge or a 'hood's cement cinderblock wall.....yeah, sure. All the artsy types do is pat each other on the back and tell the world how great this stuff is.... and hold a tantrum of epic proportion when we say it looks like the work of a four-year-old. Then they sell it to (gullible) collectors for a fortune.
    • IgboNewaki  •  3 months ago
      My birds leave better "artwork" in the bottom of the cages!!
    • Mickey  •  Miami, United States  •  3 months ago
      Hey, somebody should check the Declaration of Independence with a special lamp. Maybe some Founding Fathers (or even Mothers) that we never heard of signed it in invisible ink!
    • Dusty  •  3 months ago
      You need to burn that with the trash and start buying things that YOU think look good. Don't buy this trash that others tell you is is wonderful. If it looks like a waste of space to you don't encourage them by buying it.....That is UGLY GARBAGE.
      • James 3 months ago
        Buy things I think look good or buy things YOU think look good? Because your statements seems to say one thing and declare that only you can have propper taste.
    • Kim  •  3 months ago
      Art is worth what a person will pay for it that day. No more, no less.
    • Robert  •  3 months ago
      My ten year old would be ashamed of producing something so juvenile and well crappy.
    • hb  •  Oklahoma City, United States  •  3 months ago
      What a crock of crap; I wouldn't have this in my house, let alone pay for it.
    • James  •  3 months ago
      Everyone is a critic. Everyone seems to want to dictate what other people like. You don't like it? Then don't buy it and don't hand it in your home. Why do you feel the need to insult people who do like it or who see something in it that you don't? Oh, and if it's so easy why are you all not famous artists? Get a life.
    • Anne  •  Fallon, United States  •  3 months ago
      Why would any idiot buy such trash? A child can do better. I could do it and I can't draw a straight line. The rich have too much money and need a big fat tax increase. How about helping a charity instead of buying crap like this!
    • Walter  •  3 months ago
      One of the characteristics of a decadent society is their inability to discern what is art and what isn't. This character's work is not art. But, alas, what can you say about a "fool" and his money?

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