It was 1982, and 24-year-old artist Keith Haring was being handcuffed and escorted out of the New York City subway, where he’d been drawing cartoonish chalk figures on the walls before ads could be put up over them. This was his routine, creating as many as 30 drawings a day, each taking only a minute or so to complete. His style was fast-paced and very pop culture, and his art wasn’t for the art world elite. It was — and still is — for everyone.
“You don’t have to know anything about art to appreciate it,” Haring told a CBS reporter in 1982. “There aren’t any hidden secrets or things you’re supposed to understand.”
Haring’s drawings are still omnipresent. Many will recognize his depictions of cartoonish crawling babies, gender-ambiguous characters entwined with one another, and various intensely zigzag-y patterned paintings. An exhibition of his work, “Keith Haring: Art Is for Everybody,” organized by the Broad Art Foundation in L.A. and now on view at the Walker Art Center, includes more than 100 works and rarely seen archival materials.
There’s also a special section focused on his 1984 residency at the Walker Art Center organized by then-curator Adam Weinberg, now former executive director of the Whitney Museum of American Art.
“Keith Haring embraced a democratic spirit in his work, aiming to dissolve the barriers between art and life,” Walker Executive Director Mary Ceruti said.
Haring’s work was intrinsically political, centering on topics including environmentalism, capitalism, religion, race and sexuality. It was the 1980s, and he participated in the nuclear disarmament movement and anti-apartheid movements and was a vocal activist during the HIV/AIDS crisis.
Haring, who was gay at a time long before the commercialized Pride parades of today, moved to New York City in 1978 from Kutztown, Pa., to attend the School of the Visual Arts. The exhibition includes his student drawings, like abstract shapes, penises, flying saucers and the popular crawling babies.
For this show, the Walker re-created the mural he made when he was an artist in residence, and it can be seen at the museum’s Cardamom Restaurant. His public art continues on today, from a mural at an Iowa elementary school to a crimson red anti-crack mural in East Harlem that he made in 1986.