Whitehot Magazine

Pictures From a Pandemic: Al Diaz

Al Diaz, Continuous Stress

By ANTHONY HADEN-GUEST, June 2020 

Al Diaz and Jean-Michel Basquiat came up with SAMO©, a contraction of Same Old Shit, as a brand name/ faux religion/ comicstrip pictogram while still at City As School High School in Brooklyn Heights. Diaz was already active on the streets. “Otherwise Samo would never have been a street art project,” he says. SAMO became a public presence in the beginning of 1978 but the duo increasingly butted heads and in 1980 Basquiat let Manhattan’s walls know that SAMO IS DEAD. The graffiti movement was in overdrive by then but Diaz felt he had been there, done that. “I was over it,” he said. He made music, playing percussion, through the 80s. It was The Radiant Child, Tamra Davis’s 2010 documentary about the Basquiat phenomenon, that motivated Al Diaz to set the record straight, bring SAMO back to life and return to art-making fulltime. His signage-derived pictorial vocabulary is as street-smart as ever and now he’s butting heads with other problems, including Covid-19. WM

Al Diaz, Social Distancing

Anthony Haden-Guest

 

Anthony Haden-Guest (born 2 February 1937) is a British writer, reporter, cartoonist, art critic, poet, and socialite who lives in New York City and London. He is a frequent contributor to major magazines and has had several books published including TRUE COLORS: The Real Life of the Art World and The Last Party, Studio 54, Disco and the Culture of the Night.

 

 

 

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