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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Milan : 5 Continents Editions, [2017]
©2017
Description:167 pages : chiefly color illustrations ; 26 cm
Language:English
Series:Art brut, la collection
Art brut, la collection (Series).
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11395586
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Lombardi, Sarah, 1972- writer of preface.
Giacosa, Gustavo, 1969- writer of supplementary textual content.
Le Breton, David, 1953- writer of supplementary textual content.
Zanzi, Anic, writer of supplementary textual content.
Collection de l'art brut (Lausanne, Switzerland), host institution.
ISBN:9788874397884
8874397887
Notes:Published in connection with the Corps exhibition, held at Collection de l'Art Brut, Lausanne, Switzerland, November 17, 2017-April 29, 2018.
"Art brut, the collection"--Title page.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 163-166).
Summary:From the remarkable Art Brut collection in Lausanne, Switzerland, founded by artist Jean Dubuffet, comes Body, the third volume in a series (following Vehicles and Architecture) created to accompany the Biennale de l'Art Brut, which showcases the diversity of this superb collection of more than 60,000 works of outsider art by creating themed exhibitions. Body offers a wealth of drawings, paintings, photographs, and sculptures, all reflecting the manifold representations of the human body in the outsider art movement. Taken together, the 300 works by 50 artists, all illustrated in color and accompanied by brief biographies and a bibliography, reveal the power of the human body to inspire both artist and observer.
Includes only works from the Lausanne museum, some of which have rarely been exhibited. The book contains a large number of drawings, paintings, photographs and sculptures, reflecting the manifold representations of the human body in Art Brut, while paying close attention to the intimate relationship the artists have established with their creations. These works represent a sort of hand-to-hand combat; they are "battles" in which no quarter is asked or given between the creator and his own image and unique personal history. For some the body is the refuge of a complex intimacy, for others it is a prison from which to escape, and for still others a storehouse of energy that needs to be set free and transformed. Rarely exhibited or published, Jean Dubuffet's prisoners tattoos reveal how creations lying on the margins of art's traditional subject matter held a magnetic attraction for the founder of the concept of Art Brut, the core of the Lausanne museum's collection. The great "classics" of Art Brut, such as Aloïse Corbaz, rub shoulders with more recent discoveries, such as Eric Derkenne's body-faces, or the all-powerful "nuclear trans-sexuality" of Giovanni Galli. The doubling of the self and a play of mirrors highlight the instinctive search for identity typical of Josef Hofer and Robert Gie. Whether dismembered and fragmented in Giovanni Bosco's work, or tightly gathered in cosmic unity in Guo Fengyi's creations, the body gives form to a perpetual flux that art can exploit to express existential experience.

Regenstein, Bookstacks

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Call Number: N7432.5.A78 B63 2017
c.1 Available Loan period: standard loan  Scan and Deliver Request for Pickup Need help? - Ask a Librarian