» The Christian Berst art brut gallery presents from March 5 to April 18 „in abstracto #2“ a collective exhibition of abstract artworks produced by about twenty classical and contemporary artists.
Art brut and abstraction, far from any figuration
Until now, the notion of abstract art brut has been at best an oxymoron and at worst an antinomy. Now, if we are willing to look at the works, rather than blindly admit the exclusions on which Jean Dubuffet based his theory, we must face the facts: many works of art brut escape in many ways from the figuration in which we thought we could keep this field locked up.
As early as 1922, psychiatrist Hans Prinzhorn preferred to the overly narrative works of his patients those that manifested a „purer“ state, in that the gesture that gives rise to them would not be subject to the interference of cultural conditioning and artistic know-how. „The exhibition catalogue text by Raphaël Koenig emphasizes this.
Dubuffet, in forging his conception of Art Brut as opposed to the abstract art popular at the time – at most he accepted the seismographs of the spiritualists – certainly did not appreciate the extent to which non-figurative Art Brut considerably broadened his quest for essentiality.
Thus, abstract art brut, depending on the profound movement from which it proceeds, takes on the most diverse forms. So many expressions whose eloquence and intensity echo the Rimbaud of the Season in Hell: „I wrote silences, nights, I noted the inexpressible. I stared at dizziness“. «
5. März – 18. April 2020
www.christianberst.com
»
The Christian Berst art brut gallery presents from March 5 to April 18 „in abstracto #2“ a collective exhibition of abstract artworks produced by about twenty classical and contemporary artists.
Art brut and abstraction, far from any figuration
Until now, the notion of abstract art brut has been at best an oxymoron and at worst an antinomy. Now, if we are willing to look at the works, rather than blindly admit the exclusions on which Jean Dubuffet based his theory, we must face the facts: many works of art brut escape in many ways from the figuration in which we thought we could keep this field locked up.
As early as 1922, psychiatrist Hans Prinzhorn preferred to the overly narrative works of his patients those that manifested a „purer“ state, in that the gesture that gives rise to them would not be subject to the interference of cultural conditioning and artistic know-how. „The exhibition catalogue text by Raphaël Koenig emphasizes this.
Dubuffet, in forging his conception of Art Brut as opposed to the abstract art popular at the time – at most he accepted the seismographs of the spiritualists – certainly did not appreciate the extent to which non-figurative Art Brut considerably broadened his quest for essentiality.
Thus, abstract art brut, depending on the profound movement from which it proceeds, takes on the most diverse forms. So many expressions whose eloquence and intensity echo the Rimbaud of the Season in Hell: „I wrote silences, nights, I noted the inexpressible. I stared at dizziness“.
«