“Art
doesn’t
go
to
sleep
in
the
bed
made
for
it;
it
would
sooner
run
away
than
say
its
own
name:
what
it
likes
is
to
be
incognito.
Its
best
moments
are
when
it
forgets
what
its
name
is.”
-‐Jean
Dubuffet,
“L’art
brut
préféré
aux
arts
culturels,”
in
L’homme
du
commun
à
l’ouvrage,
Gallimard,
Paris:
1973,
p.
90-‐91.
Ricco/Maresca
Gallery
and
Jennifer
Pinto
Safian
are
pleased
to
announce
Dubuffet
and
the
Art
Brut.
The
exhibition
presents
the
art
of
Jean
Dubuffet
(1901-‐1985)
alongside
works
championed
by
Dubuffet
and
collected
under
the
rubric
of
Art
Brut.
Between
1945
and
his
death
in
1985,
Dubuffet
defined
Art
Brut,
aggressively
collecting,
exhibiting
and
publishing
the
genre.
His
collection,
now
housed
at
the
Collection
de
L'Art
Brut,
Lausanne,
Switzerland,
established
the
canon
of
recognized
Art
Brut
artists.
These
artists,
in
turn,
dramatically
impacted
Dubuffet’s
personal
artistic
vision.
The
exhibition
includes
works
by
celebrated
figures
of
the
Art
Brut
circle
-‐
Alöise
Corbaz,
Janko
Domsic,
Madge
Gill,
Miguel
Hernandez,
Emile
Josome
Hodinos,
Augustin
Lesage,
Scottie
Wilson,
Adolf
Wölfli
and
Carlo
Zinelli,
along
with
works
by
abstract
expressionist
Alfonso
Ossorio.
Juxtaposed,
we
see
Jean
Dubuffet’s
circle
of
influence.
In
1945,
Dubuffet
began
to
travel
extensively
throughout
Europe
to
discover
an
art
that
“addresses
itself
to
our
spirit,
not
to
our
eyes,”
an
art
that
is
pure,
spontaneous,
direct,
and
not
influenced
by
fine
art
and
mainstream
culture.
By
1948,
Dubuffet
and
several
leading
Dadaists
and
Surrealists,
including
André
Breton
and
Michel
Tapié,
had
founded
the
Compagnie
de
l'Art
Brut.
Under
Dubuffet's
leadership,
this
organization
defined
and
strictly
enforced
the
criteria
applied
to
the
collecting
of
Art
Brut.
The
most
significant
determinant
was
that
the
art
was
created
by
individuals
who
were
not
part
of
the
conventional
art
scene.
“Here,
Art
possesses
a
strength
coming
from
desire,
from
magic…Isolated
from
society,
they
create
their
own
feasts.”
Originally
comprised
of
approximately
1200
works
of
art
created
by
individuals
secluded
in
mental
hospitals
or
otherwise
socially
isolated,
the
Compagnie
de
l'Art
Brut's
collection
was
the
first
one
of
its
kind
to
exist
beyond
the
confines
of
a
mental
institution.
With
the
1949
exhibition
of
the
collection
at
the
Galerie
René
Drouin
in
Paris,
Jean
Dubuffet
formally
introduced
Art
Brut
to
an
indifferent
public.
Due
to
philosophical
differences
among
its
founders,
the
Compagnie
eventually
dissolved
in
1951.
Forced
to
find
a
new
home
for
the
collection,
Dubuffet
shipped
all
the
works
to
his
friend
and
colleague,
the
abstract
expressionist
painter
Alfonso
Ossorio.
Ossorio
housed
the
collection
at
his
Wainscott,
New
York
estate
for
the
next
decade;
in
1962,
it
was
donated
to
the
municipality
of
Lausanne,
Switzerland
and
permanently
installed
in
the
Chateau
de
Beaulieu
under
the
name
Collection
de
L’Art
Brut.