Portrait of a Detroit artist in the shadows


The role a Detroit-born artist played in the New York art world of the 1980s is explored in “Make Me Famous,” a scrappy look at the life, influence and struggle of East Village expressionist Edward Brezinski.

Brezinski was a player in the hand-to-mouth, DIY days of the Lower East Side’s art movement of the early ’80s, where Jean-Michel Basquiat and Madonna were rubbing elbows with artists like Keith Haring and Andy Warhol.

Edward Brezinski in "Make Me Famous."

The conditions of life — “everyone was living in garbage,” says one of Brezinski’s contemporaries — are romanticized in director Brian Vincent’s portrait of an artist living on the edge. Brezinski, born and raised in Detroit before making his way to New York, never broke through to the level of some of his peers, and Vincent puts together the pieces of why, arguing for his importance nonetheless.



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