Few masterworks so powerfully capture the themes, concerns, and personal history that defined Jean-Michel Basquiat’s career as his 1983 Museum Security (Broadway Meltdown). This May, this masterpiece will star in Replica Shoes ’s Contemporary Evening Auction with an estimate in excess of $45 million, appearing at auction for the first time in more than a decade. The work belongs to the most sought-after moment of his career, when his visual language reached an extraordinary level of clarity, ambition, and scale, unfolding here at an particularly exceptional degree of gesture, color, and compositional complexity. The work will be on public view in a special exhibition at the Breuer tomorrow through 15 March, before traveling to Hong Kong, Los Angeles, and London before returning to New York for pre-sale exhibition ahead of Replica Shoes ’s marquee evening auctions this May.
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Jean-Michel Basquiat
Museum Security (Broadway Meltdown)
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“Intense and electrifying, Basquiat’s Museum Security (Broadway Meltdown) embodies the qualities that define the artist at his very best: executed at the height of his career, on an impressive scale, and charged with the imagery and language that made his work instantly recognizable. A storied masterpiece within his oeuvre, I have long dreamt of bringing this work to auction, and it is a truly rare privilege to do so this spring.”
Belonging to a suite of 12 monumental canvases that Basquiat painted in 1983, Museum Security (Broadway Meltdown) stands among the most ambitious works of this celebrated group. At the center of this group are Museum Security (Broadway Meltdown) and the closely related painting, Hollywood Africans —now in the collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York—which together present the most layered and conceptually rich explorations of Basquiat’s iconography and language.
“The Fondation Beyeler had the honour of holding the first major retrospective in Europe of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s work on the anniversary of his 50th birthday in 2010. The exhibition traced the development of this extraordinary, ground-breaking artist in over 150 paintings, drawings and objets d’art. One of the most important paintings was Museum Security (Broadway Meltdown) (1983), which took a prominent place in the comprehensive retrospective. I was able to study the painting on an almost daily basis for the three-month duration of the exhibition and it came to be one of my personal favourites. It is a key work in Jean-Michel Basquiat’s oeuvre, a modern-day ‘writing on the wall’ in the metaphorical and literal sense, and one of the great masterpieces of contemporary art.”
Museum Security (Broadway Meltdown) has been the subject of institutional interest, shown in nearly every major exhibition of the artist’s work including Jean-Michel Basquiat: New Paintings at Larry Gagosian Gallery in Los Angeles, where seven works from the suite were presented together. Museum Security (Broadway Meltdown) was on long-term loan to the Fondation Beyeler in Riehen from 2013-18. Subsequently, the work featured prominently in Fondation Louis Vuitton’s monumental retrospective (2018-19), followed by the Brant Foundation’s Jean-Michel Basquiat presentation from March-May 2019. Most recently, the work served as a centerpiece of the major exhibition Signs: Connecting Past and Future at the Zaha Hadid-designed Dongdaemun Design Plaza Museum in Seoul (2025-26), where it appeared on the cover of the exhibition catalogue for the retrospective. Further testament to the work’s importance within his oeuvre, the work is featured on the cover of the acclaimed monograph, Jean-Michel Basquiat, edited by Dieter Buchhart and Anna Karina Hofbauer.
Among the most complex, conceptually rigorous and historically significant works in the artist’s body of work, Museum Security (Broadway Meltdown) presents a vast dictionary of Basquiat’s iconic signs, symbols and text, taking head on the themes that preoccupied the artist throughout his lifetime. At an operatic scale, the work unfolds as a vast, epic window into the young artist's innermost reflections on success and exploitation, fame and abjection, value and merit, race, class, and colonialism, colliding and engaging with one another in rich, saturated oil stick. Created just a few years after Basquiat emerged from the downtown New York scene, the painting reflects the artist’s growing engagement with structures of cultural authority. With phrases such as “Museum Security” and “Priceless Art,” Basquiat stages a charged confrontation between artistic value, institutional gatekeeping, and the commercial forces shaping the contemporary art world. As he rapidly entered the global spotlight, the work’s title is an exceptionally direct reference to Basquiat’s introspection of his status in the art world as he inserts himself into the canon, while simultaneously questioning the systems that determine who is permitted to enter it – a dichotomy which lies at the heart of the work.
“This work dances between the written and the drawn. On a monumental scale, Basquiat unites images, words and symbols, folding them together so that the words and their meanings begin to blur and shift. There’s an immediacy from his head to his hand to the line.”
Towering nearly seven feet in height, Museum Security (Broadway Meltdown) exemplifies Basquiat’s extraordinary ability to translate the immediacy of street culture onto canvas on a monumental scale. Incredibly complex and heavily worked, from collages, frenetic scrawls to dripping paint to collaged elements, the surface teems with the artist’s signature symphony of text and images which thread themselves throughout his body of work. Among them are “Priceless Art,” “Museum Security,” “Yen,” “Asbestos,” “Hooverville” and “Five Cents,” all alongside the three-point crown, star symbols, and a haunting skull-like head whose red-rimmed eyes anchor the composition. Absorbing and transforming multiple visual languages at once, Museum Security (Broadway Meltdown) fuses the entanglement of the immediacy and urgency of the present with an acute awareness of the weight of art history behind and before him.
“I cross out words so you will see them more....”