Singular Visions:
Images of Art Brut from the Anthony J. Petullo
Collection
September 16 - December 31, 2006
Opening reception Friday, September 16th from 5 - 8 pm
press release
images

Martin Ramirez
Courtyard (#208), 1954
mixed media on paper
Press release:
Intuit: The Center for Intuitive and Outsider Art will present the
exhibition, "Singular
Visions: Images of Art Brut from the Anthony J. Petullo Collection, " from
September 16 - December 31 at Intuit, 756 N. Milwaukee Ave., Chicago. Gallery
hours are noon to 5 pm, Wed.-Sat.; admission is free. An opening reception
is scheduled for Friday, September 16, 2005, 5-8 pm, at Intuit.
The forty-two works in this exhibition are from Anthony
J. Petullo's collection of European and American works by self-taught
artists, loosely classified as Art Brut . Coined in the 1940s by French
artist Jean Dubuffet, Art Brut (today often known by its English translation, "outsider
art") refers to works created by individuals with no formal art training
and no consciousness of art world traditions.
Many of these artists produced their bodies of work while institutionalized,
including Swiss artist Adolph Wölfli (1864-1930), who during his
35 years in an asylum created a massive volume of colorfully intricate
compositions. Others were isolates and loners. For more than forty years
Chicago artist Henry Darger (1892-1973) worked as a menial laborer, attended
Catholic Mass, and lived in virtual isolation. This seemingly benign
existence belied his keenly obsessive artistic output. His 15,000 page
epic of good versus evil, "In The Realms Of The Unreal," was illustrated
with meticulous watercolors and was discovered by his landlord at the
time of Darger's departure for an elderly care facility. Artists such
as Madge Gill were inspired to create by spiritual muses. Gill believed
that she could communicate with the dead, and the creation of her ornate
drawings was guided by a spirit.
Curated by Katherine Murrell, "Singular Visions" also features other
major artists within the Art Brut canon such as Martin Ramirez, Scottie
Wilson, Michel Nedjar, Anna Zemánkozá, and Gugging artists.
Images:

Adolf
Wolfli
Angel , 1920
pencil and colored pencil on paper |
Michel
Nedjar
Untitled, n.d.
acrylic on cardboard |
|