wiseguy
12-20-2004, 09:14 AM
Art Brut, artists and art
The idea of "Art Brut" appeared around 1945. Its conception is generally attributed to the French painter Jean Dubuffet who meant by the term "works executed by those immune to artistic culture in which imitation has no role; in which their creators take all (subjects, materials, transposition, rhythm, style etc.) from their own individuality and not from the base of classical art or stylish trends". One can understand from this definition that parctitioners of "Art Brut" are mentally or socially marginal: prisoners, patients of psychiatric hospitals or other institutions, originals, solitary beings, condemned, all individuals who have a social status removed from the constraints of cultural conditioning. Their work is conceived and executed outside of that which we normally regard as the domain of the Fine Arts; that is to say, schools, galleries, museums, etc. These works are, therefore, conceived without consideration of the usual recipients of artistic production - in fact, without consideration of any specific destination. This rupture with collectivity and this indifference for the rules of comportment ans expression can be considered a pathological element in the medical sense. Nevertheless, this idea encourages the exercise and blossoming of mental virtues that ordinarily are stifled in the "norma" person. Whoever desires in art a disorientation and a heat of the spirit will find it in "Art Brut". Since 1945, Jean Dubuffet has searched for "extra cultural" works in psychiatric hospitals, especially in Switzerland and France, by the spiritual mediums, and by the renegades of the society in general. Although the collection was never normally excessible to the public at large, it nevertheless exercised a huge fascination. Wanting to assure a definitive public status to the collection, Dubuffet offered it to the city of Lausanne in 1971. The collection of "Art Brut" was inaugurated at the Chäteau de Beaulieu in Lausanne in February, 1976. It contains at present more than 15'000 items. With the help of all of those who hold it dearly, it will continue to enrich itself and enlarge its public.
>from here< (http://www.the-artists.org/MovementView.cfm?id=8A01EEC3-BBCF-11D4-A93500D0B7069B40)
http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/IMG/doc-1102.jpgalexander
http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/IMG/doc-618.jpgconsuelo "chelo" gonzales amezcua
http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/IMG/doc-692.jpgstanislav holas
http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/IMG/doc-707.jpgalexandre p. lobanov
http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/IMG/doc-1046.jpgalexandre p. lobanov
http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/IMG/doc-1049.jpgalexandre p. lobanov
the images are from here (http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/english.html)
The idea of "Art Brut" appeared around 1945. Its conception is generally attributed to the French painter Jean Dubuffet who meant by the term "works executed by those immune to artistic culture in which imitation has no role; in which their creators take all (subjects, materials, transposition, rhythm, style etc.) from their own individuality and not from the base of classical art or stylish trends". One can understand from this definition that parctitioners of "Art Brut" are mentally or socially marginal: prisoners, patients of psychiatric hospitals or other institutions, originals, solitary beings, condemned, all individuals who have a social status removed from the constraints of cultural conditioning. Their work is conceived and executed outside of that which we normally regard as the domain of the Fine Arts; that is to say, schools, galleries, museums, etc. These works are, therefore, conceived without consideration of the usual recipients of artistic production - in fact, without consideration of any specific destination. This rupture with collectivity and this indifference for the rules of comportment ans expression can be considered a pathological element in the medical sense. Nevertheless, this idea encourages the exercise and blossoming of mental virtues that ordinarily are stifled in the "norma" person. Whoever desires in art a disorientation and a heat of the spirit will find it in "Art Brut". Since 1945, Jean Dubuffet has searched for "extra cultural" works in psychiatric hospitals, especially in Switzerland and France, by the spiritual mediums, and by the renegades of the society in general. Although the collection was never normally excessible to the public at large, it nevertheless exercised a huge fascination. Wanting to assure a definitive public status to the collection, Dubuffet offered it to the city of Lausanne in 1971. The collection of "Art Brut" was inaugurated at the Chäteau de Beaulieu in Lausanne in February, 1976. It contains at present more than 15'000 items. With the help of all of those who hold it dearly, it will continue to enrich itself and enlarge its public.
>from here< (http://www.the-artists.org/MovementView.cfm?id=8A01EEC3-BBCF-11D4-A93500D0B7069B40)
http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/IMG/doc-1102.jpgalexander
http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/IMG/doc-618.jpgconsuelo "chelo" gonzales amezcua
http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/IMG/doc-692.jpgstanislav holas
http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/IMG/doc-707.jpgalexandre p. lobanov
http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/IMG/doc-1046.jpgalexandre p. lobanov
http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/IMG/doc-1049.jpgalexandre p. lobanov
the images are from here (http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/english.html)