Jean-Michel Basquiat: Made on Market Street chronicles the artist’s Los Angeles period, when distance from New York’s scene unlocked a surge of experimentation. Centered on the house on Market Street where Basquiat lived and worked, the book pairs nearly thirty paintings and works on paper with archival flyers, snapshots, and ephemera that map friendships, music, and film influences. Essays by Fred Hoffman and voices close to the artist sketch a portrait of creative growth: bolder color fields, expansive scale, and a deepening synthesis of text, anatomy, and iconography. The West Coast light and filmic atmosphere register in the work’s pacing and palette, while recurring motifs—crowns, skeletal forms, fragments of history and jazz—gain new inflections. Designed as an exhibition catalogue yet intimate in tone, the volume invites readers into rooms where canvases leaned against walls and ideas leapt from notebooks to paint. Rather than rehearse the familiar mythology, it documents a specific city’s imprint on process and output. For admirers and newcomers alike, it’s a focused lens on how place shapes art, revealing Basquiat not only as a phenomenon of 1980s New York, but as an artist whose vocabulary absorbed and transformed Los Angeles into lasting marks on canvas.