Michael Thomas Holman is a New York-based artist, writer, filmmaker and musician.[1] He is also an early 1980s downtown scene subculturalist and creator of the Hip Hop music program Graffiti Rock. Holman is a founding member, along with Jean-Michel Basquiat, of the experimental band Gray.[2]
While dancing at a disco in northern California, he got recruited into a theatrical rock band called The Tubes.[6]
In May 1978, Holman moved to New York City to work on Wall Street.[6] There he discovered the Fab Five graffiti group and befriended Fab 5 Freddy.[6]
Gray band
In April 1979, Holman organized the Canal Zone party with Stan Peskett and Fab 5 Freddy, which showcased the talents of the emerging hip hop culture for a downtown audience.[7] At this event Holman met a teenaged Jean-Michel Basquiat, who revealed himself as the elusive SAMO.[8][9] Together they formed the experimental noise band Gray.[6]
In the 1990s, Holman and Nicholas Taylor, another original member of the band Gray, created sonic music performances at clubs such as Club USA, Sybarite, Nuyorican Poets Cafe and The Ritz, where they opened for Todd Rundgren. Gray release their first album, Shades Of... in 2011 on Plush Safe Records.[12][13] A remastered version of the album with additional remixes was released on Ubiquity Records in 2019, that features the work of producers such as: Todd Rundgren, Hank Shocklee, Deantoni Parks, Mike Tewz and King Britt. Since 2010, Holman and Taylor have re-launched Gray.[14] They first performing at the New Museum in July 2011, then in 2012, the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. and the Brooklyn Academy of Music with Questlove of The Roots (within Questlove's Shuffle Culture avant-garde show).[15]
Film and television
Holman made short art films that premiered at The Mudd Club, Tier 3, The Ritz and other music venues.[citation needed]
In 1984, Holman produced and hosted the short-lived hip-hop television show, Graffiti Rock.[16]
Holman was consulted and credited with story development on the screenplay for the 1996 Miramax feature film Basquiat, directed by Julian Schnabel.[17] He also appeared in the film which depicted the life of his late bandmate Jean-Michel Basquiat.[6]
Holman was the third writer to use the term Hip Hop in print (East Village Eye, January 1982) following Robert Flipping (New Pittsburg Courier, Feb. 24, 1979), and Collis Davis (Amsterdam News, Jan. 12, 1980. [19] He had different hip-hop TV shows around 1982, which were performance shows of graffiti artists, DJs, rappers, B-boys and B-girls.[6]
Holman created, managed, and choreographed the B-boy dance crew New York City Breakers, and created the first company called Hip hop International Inc in 1983. Touring the world and performing for the likes of President Ronald Reagan and the UK's Prince Andrew.[citation needed]
Holman helped produce and 2nd unit direct the feature film Beat Street (1984). Holman rented Club Negril, a legendary Jamaican reggae club run by Jennifer and Hubert Peters, then created, hosted and produced the first Hip Hop television show in 1984, Graffiti Rock.[6] He later wrote Breaking, a book on Hip Hop Culture for Scribner's Publishing.[6]
Holman created installation art at the Mudd Club, notably The Soul Party in 1980.[citation needed]
Working as a fine artist, Holman deconstructs social-political symbolism on canvas. His paintings were shown at the Massey/Klein Gallery (2018), and Miami Art Basel in 2007 and 2008, and the Spring Break Show in New York City.[citation needed]