Showing posts with label art brut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art brut. Show all posts

11/09/25

Roger Ballen Exhibition in Austria at Museum Gugging, Maria Gugging - "roger ballen.! drawing meets photography" Exhibition

Roger Ballen.! drawing meets photography
Museum Gugging, Maria Gugging, Austria
September 25, 2025 – February 15, 2026

Roger Ballen
Roger Ballen
Funeral rites, 2004
© Roger Ballen

Roger Ballen
Roger Ballen
Untitled, 2020
© Roger Ballen

Roger Ballen
Roger Ballen
Wall shadows, 2003
© Roger Ballen

The exhibition roger ballen.! drawing meets photography by South African-based photo artist ROGER BALLEN (*1950) transcends the boundaries between photography and other art forms, at museum gugging.

Nina Ansperger and Roger Ballen in museum gugging
Nina Ansperger
and Roger Ballen in museum gugging
© NÖ Museum Betriebs GmbH, Daniel Hinterramskogler
"With Roger Ballen, we are bringing one of the most important and influential photographic artists of the 21st century to museum gugging," explains Nina Ansperger, the exhibition's curator. Over the past decades, his artistic work has evolved from narrative photography to a work increasingly dominated by drawing. Drawing is therefore the focus of this exhibition. "Roger Ballen is closely connected to Jean Dubuffet's idea of ​​Art Brut and defines himself as an 'outsider.' Drawing, as a central element of his photographic art, is simultaneously the most important medium of the art from Gugging. Thus, not only the subject matter but also the location of the exhibition could not be more appropriate," Nina Ansperger asserts. 

Roger Ballen, who refers to himself as an “outsider,” said: “I have brought drawing and photography into painting to produce a mixed medium image. It has been my goal to break down the boundaries between photography and other arts, taking photography out of its self-isolation as a form.” 

Roger Ballen in museum gugging
Roger Ballen
in museum gugging
© NÖ Museum Betriebs GmbH, Daniel Hinterramskogler

New York-born Roger Ballen has lived in South Africa for several decades. His photographic works, created over 40 years, possess incredible narrative power because they oscillate between painting, drawing, installation, and photography. His “Ballenesque” aesthetic is unsettling, vehemently demands self-reflection and leads to a journey into one’s own unconscious.

Curator: Nina Ansperger

MUSEUM GUGGING
Am Campus 2, 3400 Maria Gugging

29/06/25

Suresh Prandi @ Maroncelli 12 Gallery, Milan - "Spirit and Spectres in Suresh's colour​​" Exhibition

Spirit and Spectres in Suresh's colour​​
Maroncelli 12 Gallery, Milan
Through September 26, 2025

Maroncelli 12 gallery presents the Suresh Prandi’s debut on the art scene and the power of his painting. “Spirito e spettri nel colore di Suresh / Spirit and Spectres in Suresh’s colour” is curated by art historian Bianca Tosatti. This is the first ever exhibition of this young artist. 

The exhibition will continue at the Gliacrobati gallery in Turin, in June-July 2026. 

Suresh Prandi’s works move emotions: the artist’s vision breaks the canonical scheme of perspective, in a dense carpet of pasty chromatic fields, supported by black strokes that allude to forms of human features. Suresh Prandi’s creative process is born from a meditative state during which the lines become tangled on a chromatic base stratified on many levels: in fact, as in the gymnastics that the artist systematically practices, spiritual understanding cannot be seen unless one learns the right techniques. And in this mass of matter, the eye emerges - more eyes - that attract the viewer and like magnets suck him into "lakes" of color. 
"And at once I find the eye that is looking back at me: extraordinarily large, fixed and enquiring - writes Bianca Tosatti in the critical text in the catalog -; a vortex sucking me inward, amplifying the tremors of my mental terrain; an outward explosion of my existence whose forms it shakes. And so the work becomes a subject-gaze situated in the field of the Other, because it is the image that looks at the subject".
Suresh Prandi was born on June 9, 1998 in Bangalore (India), where he spent his early years with his parents. At the age of eight he was adopted by the Prandi family and moved to Campogalliano, a small village in the province of Modena, where he still lives. He regularly attended elementary, middle and high school, graduating from the professional institute of Correggio (Reggio Emilia) in “Services for Agriculture and Rural Development”. Thanks to his idol, Cristiano Ronaldo, Suresh Prandi first became passionate about football and then about gymnastics, developing a true cult for the body, around which all his days now revolve. In 2018 Suresh Prandi began his placement at the day center of the Nazareno cooperative in Carpi, in the province of Modena (an association for the reception, care and rehabilitation of people with disabilities), where he began to express himself through drawing. Noticing his natural talent and the benefits he derives from it in terms of relationships and personal well-being, in 2024 it was decided to permanently include him in Manolibera painting atelier, where he works every day. 

The artist often uses oil pastels to create a chromatic mosaic that almost entirely covers the previously created drawing; he is a master in the combination of color that never fades into the next shade but it is placed next to it as if the hues and combinations were innate. And speaking of “Landscape with Angel”, Bianca Tosatti writes: “The colour is approached in a circumspect and yet ambitious way; weighed and divided like the cones of pigment on an Indian market stall, arranged by a wise seller so that the emotional value of each one can be perceived”. 

MARONCELLI 12 GALLERY
Via Maroncelli, 12 – Milan

Spirit and Spectres in Suresh's colour​​
Maroncelli 12 Gallery, Milan, May 28 – September 26, 2025

10/05/25

Anna Zemankova @ Gladstone Gallery, NYC - An exhibition of drawings by Czech artist Anna Zemánková (1908–1986), spanning her oeuvre from the 1960s-1970s

Anna Zemánková 
Gladstone Gallery, New York
May 3 – June 14, 2025

Gladstone Gallery presents an exhibition of drawings by Czech artist Anna Zemánková (1908–1986), spanning her oeuvre from the 1960s-1970s. This exhibition emphasizes the remarkable foresight of Zemánková’s work through an art historical lens, reflecting her trailblazing influence in abstraction and seeks to expand the psychological and spiritual realms of the form. The works in the show comprise rarely seen incandescent botanical drawings and pastel works on paper.

To engage with Zemánková’s art is to enter a realm of fluid metamorphosis. Her compositions pulse with biological urgency, as if each line were a living organism. Untitled (1970s), reminiscent of the zither her father once played at weddings, radiates effervescent yellows laced with electrifying blues, its thorns piercing velvety curves. Fibrous strings extend like tentacles or arpeggios of color. Here, sound becomes substance in a stunning manifestation of synesthesia: a shimmering grid of magnified cork-cells vibrate with Charles Lloyd’s spatial melisma. Zemánková’s visual language thrives on the duality of microscopic precision and cosmic abstraction, a tension mirroring her process—trance-like improvisation guided by innate musicality.

A dentist, mother, and grandmother, Anna Zemánková channeled life’s multiplicities into creations that defy simple categorization. While often compared to mediumistic artists such as Kunz or Klint, Zemánková’s work rarely touches on spirituality directly, instead rooting itself in the subconscious—what the Surrealists termed “pure psychic automatism.” In her quotidian back-and-forth between labor and leisure, Anna Zemánková found a way to forge her cellular patterns into networks of visual information and stimulation, liberating herself from the physical confinement imposed by her diabetes. Her refusal to title works, another deliberate act of liberation, invites viewers to project their own narratives onto her wildly imaginative botany. Cleaving open otherworldly spaces with her art, Zemánková’s legacy lies in her fantastical elsewhere.

Born in Moravia, Anna Zemánková came of age during the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the birth of an independent Czechoslovakia in 1918. This era fostered a fervent patriotism, marked by a devotion to preserving cultural traditions such as folk costumes, songs, fairy tales, and ornamental drawings. These influences ignited Zemánková’s early passion for painting. Though gifted in depicting colorful, realistic landscapes, her parents discouraged her from attending art school, redirecting her toward dentistry. Amid the turmoil of political and social upheaval, Anna Zemánková followed a conventional path: marriage, motherhood, and grandmotherhood—roles that temporarily eclipsed her artistic ambitions.

Zemánková’s artistic rebirth began serendipitously. In the late 1950s, her sons Slavomír and Bohumil discovered a forgotten suitcase filled with her early paintings in the family basement. Recognizing the vitality of these works, they encouraged her to resume painting—a therapeutic act that blossomed into an astonishing late-career surge. Though self-taught, Anna Zemánková was no recluse. Her son Bohumil and daughter-in-law Markét a, both trained sculptors, admired her intuitive genius, as did a circle of cultural figures including artist Jan Reich, filmmaker Vlastimil Venclík, and even First Lady of the Czech Republic, Olga Havlová. Zemánková actively courted public recognition, hosting an open house several times over the years (1964, 1967, 1968 and 1970). Her work was exhibited at Prague’s Theatre on the Balustrade in 1966 and later shown at London’s Hayward Gallery in 1979. 

In the quiet hours before dawn, she would rise in her Prague apartment, surrounded by real and artificial flowers, and surrender to the classical music of Beethoven and Janáček or the Jazzy Blues of Charles Lloyd. These solitary sessions, lit by the soft glow of imagination, became her sanctuary. With paper as her stage, she conjured a universe of pulsating tendrils, succulent petals, and coiled organic forms—a paradise of biomorphic flowers that blurred the boundaries of reality. Born from the shadows of personal suffering, her work invites the viewer into a kaleidoscopic garden where beauty and the grotesque intertwine, where music morphs into matter, and where creation itself becomes transcendence.

This exhibition is presented in collaboration with the Estate of Anna Zemánková and Cavin-Morris Gallery.
“Sure, I’ll draw you something, I’ll draw you one of my fantasies.”
—Anna Zemánková 
ANNA ZEMANKOVA is one of the great artists of the twentieth century and a pivotal figure in the Art Brut pantheon, alongside Jeanne Tripier, Madge Gill, Aloise Corbaz, and Emma Kunz. Her work has been featured in international solo and group exhibitions since 1971, preceding appearances at the Venice Biennale (2013 and 2024). Among her most significant exhibitions are Outsiders at London’s Hayward Gallery (1980) and the São Paulo Art Biennial (1981). Posthumous retrospectives include the High Museum of Art, Atlanta (1997); Slovak National Gallery, Bratislava (2007); Museum Montanelli, Prague (2011); Saarland Gallery and European Art Forum, Berlin (2011); Museum of Art, Kobe, and Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, Japan (2012); and Collection de l’Art Brut, Lausanne (2017). Her work resides in public collections such as the Milwaukee Art Museum, WI; American Folk Art Museum, New York, NY; Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe, NM; Arnulf Rainer Museum, Baden, Austria; and private collections including the abcd collection, Paris; Centre Pompidou, Paris; LAM, Musée d’art Moderne, d’art Contemporain et d’art Brut de Lille Métropole, Villeneuve-d'Ascq; Boston Fine Arts, Boston,and The Museum of Everything, London. 

GLADSTONE GALLERY 
130 East 64th Street, New York, NY 10065

22/03/25

Gautier Willaume: Abstract Paintings, 2025 - "Irregular Vertical Lines" - 17 Paintings Online

Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines
Abstract paintings, 2025

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

The French artist GAUTIER WILLAUME (born in 1968) presents, on Wanafoto, a series of paintings in progress. 

The paintings in this series are painted with acrylics applied with an ink roller (these are normally used for engravings or lithographs). Gautier Willaume's approach relies on a degree of chance in the drawing and the resulting "imperfections" that make these paintings interesting.

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

In his previous works, abstract painter Gautier Willaume had focused on paintings with clearly defined lines. While abstraction is central to his entire body of work, this series is innovative, for example, compared to his geometric paintings or those in the pop art-inspired "Théodore Géricault" series. 

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

The series presented in this post consists of small formats (300 gr. A4 sheets) while the other paintings of Gautier Willaume on paper are, for the majority of them, in the format 50 x 65 cm and his canvases in the format 60 x 80 cm. We can therefore imagine that these paintings are preparatory works for larger works.

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If you are an amateur artist, like Gautier Willaume, and 
you would like to present your work on this blogzine, 
please use the contact form (top left). It's free of course ;)

04/03/25

sexy... @ Galerie Gugging, Maria Gugging - Featured Artists: Basel Al-Bazzaz, Johann Garber, Helga Sophia Goetze, Julia Hanzl, Johann Korec, Hannes Lehner, Karl Vondal

sexy... Basel Al-Bazzaz, Johann Garber, Helga Sophia Goetze, Julia Hanzl, Johann Korec, Hannes Lehner, Karl Vondal
Galerie Gugging, Maria Gugging 
February 20 – May 11, 2025

Johann Garber
JOHANN GARBER
A.LADY, 1988
Ink, 14,7 x 10,4 cm
© Privatstiftung - Künstler aus Gugging

Helga Sophia Goetze
HELGA SOPHIA GOETZE
Untitled, 2001
Pencil, embroidery, 76 x 77,8 cm
© Sammlung Pott

Basel Al-Bazzaz
BASEL AL-BAZZAZ
Wicked beauty by night, 2021
Pencil, colored pencils, 42 x 56 cm
Courtesy galerie gugging

In the exhibition “sexy…”, seven unique artists come together at the Galerie Gugging and whisk the visitors away into their erotic worlds. From the sexy works of the Gugging Artists Johann Garber, Johann Korec and Karl Vondal to the fascinating universe of Helga Sophia Goetze, the oriental women of Basel Al-Bazzaz, the naked men of Hannes Lehner and the ceramics of Julia Hanzl. 

The depiction of naked bodies has a long tradition, from the earliest cave paintings to the present day. Many Gugging Artists and their national and international colleagues have also taken up the theme from the very beginning.

Basel Al-Bazzaz Artwork
BASEL AL-BAZZAZ
Moulin Rouge, 2020
Pencil, colored pencils, 42 x 56 cm
Courtesy galerie gugging

Basel Al-Bazzaz presents his colourful oeuvre. The artist, who was originally born in Baghdad, has been working in a print workshop in Vienna since 2000, where he creates fine, detailed works on paper that have a special effect on the viewer. Using watercolours, pencils and coloured pencils to create works of art is Al-Bazzaz’s great passion. His playful, erotic depictions of women also reflect his longing for the Orient. While he often uses models for his depictions of plants and animals, the inspiration for his depictions of naked women comes from his own imagination.

Helga Sophia Goetze - Artwork
HELGA SOPHIA GOETZE
Untitled, n.d.
Pencil, 21 x 29,6 cm
© Sammlung Pott

Helga Sophia Goetze
HELGA SOPHIA GOETZE
Untitled, n. d.
Pencil, gouache,  colored pencils, 29,7 x 21 cm
© Sammlung Pott

The German artist Helga Sophia Goetze (1922 - 2008) was born in Magdeburg. She was a feminist icon, who loved to break boundaries and boldly share her views out into the world. Goetze left behind a fascinating universe of painted pictures, embroidered carpets, sketches, collages and an extensive written legacy, including numerous poems. She was known and infamous for her “vigil” at the Berlin Memorial Church, where she held out for an hour every day for over 20 years from 1983 to proclaim her message: “Fucking is peace!” The Galerie Gugging shows a tapestry and sketches by the artist and poet, who was an investigative, sharp observer and chronicler of her time, as part of the sexy… exhibition.

Johann Garber Artwork
JOHANN GARBER
A-JUNGLE, 2010
Indian Ink, 29,7 x 42 cm
© Privatstiftung - Künstler aus Gugging

The Gugging Artist Johann Garber is best known for his dense Indian ink drawings. A recurring theme in his work are his so-called “Sexi papers”. These have even adorned the renowned Museum of Sex on 5th Avenue in New York. “If you ask Johann Garber why he keeps drawing naked people, his answer is: because that is how we are born! – We come like this … and we leave like this”, says galerie gugging director Nina Katschnig with a smile. Johann Garber was born in Wiener Neustadt and has lived in the House of Artists in Gugging since 1981.

Julia Hanzl is an innovative ceramic artist from Vienna, who has already made a name for herself across borders, especially in the United States, and grew up in a family of artists. The self-taught artist, whose works usually have a provocative sexy-erotic touch, is appreciated for her unmistakable ceramics, mixed media sculptures, porcelain & bronze editions and ceramic sculptures in combination with taxidermy. Julia Hanzl lives and works in Mödling.

Johann Korec
JOHANN KOREC
Lovers in winter, 1998
Acrylic on canvas, 100 x 100 cm
© Art Brut KG

Johann Korec Artwork
JOHANN KOREC
Alexandera Korbus:, 2003
Indian Ink, Watercolours, 18,9 x 13,9 cm
© Art Brut KG

For the Gugging Artist Johann Korec, the nude depiction of couples was the predominant favourite theme in his works, which he celebrated extensively. Korec lived in the House of Artists in Gugging from 1981 until his death in 2008. While he began his artistic career by tracing figures, drawing and painting lovers later became his preferred motif. The protagonist was almost always the artist himself. He usually added a description of the subjects at the bottom of the picture, making the works appear like a diary. His depicted partners did not come from his imagination, but were often actual girlfriends from the time. In 1990, he was awarded the Oskar Kokoschka Prize, as was Johann Garber with the group of the Gugging Artists.

Hannes Lehner
HANNES LEHNER
Naked Man with column, 2023
Acrylic, pencil, coloured pencils
42 x 29,7 cm
Courtesy galerie gugging

Hannes Lehner
HANNES LEHNER
Sensual naked man, 2023
Acrylic, pencil, coloured pencils
42 x 29,7 cm
Courtesy galerie gugging

Born in Vienna in 1986, Hannes Lehner loves muscular bodies, enjoys going to the gym and wanted to become an underwear model himself. The artist’s creative career includes central themes such as landscapes, architecture, automobiles, outer space, fantastic animal figures and now also male nudes. Over the years, he has created an extensive oeuvre that includes drawings, paintings and three-dimensional objects. The lively artist, who is always up for a joke, uses acrylic, coloured pencil, gouache or paperboard for his works. Hannes Lehner’s sexy, well-trained men, usually staged in bright colours, are the logical continuation of his popular houses and cars.

Karl Vondal Artwork
KARL VONDAL
She loves music, 2023
Acrylic, pencil, coloured pencils, Indian Ink
29,8 x 70 cm
© Privatstiftung - Künstler aus Gugging

Karl Vondal Artwork
KARL VONDAL
With kisses both, 2022
Mixed media, 59,4 x 42 cm
© Privatstiftung - Künstler aus Gugging

The Gugging Artist Karl Vondal is describes by the Galerie Gugging director Nina Katschnig as the “master of eroticism from Gugging”. Vondal lived in the House of Artists in Gugging from 2002 to 2024 and had a particular fondness for erotic depictions, which he worked on tirelessly day and night. His nude women and loving couples usually appear with him in the role of the prince – in delicate pastel tones, which became more vibrant towards the end of his career. The protagonists of his works are often found on islands under palm trees or above the roofs of towns and villages. Similar to Johann Korec, his works are usually accompanied by illustrious stories. In sexy… the Galerie Gugging exhibits small and large works, some of which have been elaborately and very vividly staged with matchsticks.

GALERIE GUGGING
At Campus 2, 3400 Maria Gugging, Austria

25/02/25

Outsider Art Fair 2005 - Artists, Exhibitors...

Outsider Art Fair 2005
Metropolitan Pavilion, New York
February 27 - March 2, 2025

Aloïse Corbaz
(1886 - 1964)
Untitled (Figures with Blue Eyes) - Double Sided, ca. 1950s
Colored pencil on paper 
Courtesy Ricco Maresca Gallery 

Bill Traylor
(1854 - 1949) 
Figures, Construction, Black, Brown and Red, 1939/42
Pencil, poster paint on cardboard 
Courtesy of Fleisher Ollman Gallery 

Adolf Wölfli
(1864 - 1930) 
New Yorker Haven, 1925
Colored pencil and graphite on paper 
Courtesy Ricco Maresca Gallery

The 33rd edition of Outsider Art Fair (OAF), the premier fair dedicated to Self-Taught Art, art brut, and Outsider Art, features 66 exhibitors from 40 cities in 9 countries at the Metropolitan Pavilion.

Visitors to the fair can expect to see art by acknowledged masters such as Henry Darger (1892–1973), William Edmondson (1874–1951), Augustin Lesage (1876–1954), Judith Scott (1943-2005), and Bill Traylor (1854-1949), as well as works by living artists such as Noviadi Angkasapura, JJ Cromer, Shuvinai Ashoona, M’onma, Julian Martin, Margot, Dan Miller and Leopold Strobl.

OAF 2025 welcomes back renowned dealers like Fleisher/Ollman Gallery (Philadelphia), which will be devoting its entire presentation to works from the estate of long-time American Folk Art Museum board member Audrey B. Heckler. It will include examples by James Castle (1899-1977), Sam Doyle (1906-1985), Howard Finster (1916-2001), Martín Ramírez (1895-1963), and Bill Traylor. Ricco/Maresca Gallery (New York) will present works from the collection of advertising pioneer Robert M. Greenberg. Built over more than 40 years, this collection holds superb works by Darger, Traylor, and Adolf Wölfli (1864-1930), among others. Aarne Anton/Nexus Singularity (New York), Cavin-Morris Gallery (New York), Marion Harris (Connecticut and New York), all of whom have exhibited with OAF since its founding, make their returns, and after a five-year hiatus, original exhibitor Henry Boxer (London) will also be on hand.

Chico da Silva
(1910 - 1985) 
Bichos 
Courtesy Simões de Assis and Estudio em Obra.

Conceição dos Bugres
(1914 - 1984)
Untitled 
Courtesy Galerie Estação and João Libertato

Outsider Art Fair 2005's Curated Space, Follow My Moves, will be an exhibit of Self-Taught art from Brazil, curated by São Paulo-based Mateus Nunes, and will feature works by renowned artists such as Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato (1900–1995), Chico da Silva (1910–1985), Conceição dos Bugres (1914-1984), and Maria Lira Marques (b. 1945).

Other booth highlights include paintings by Maurice Sullins (1910–1995) at Hana Pietri (Chicago), paintings by manga artist Takashi Nemoto at Akio Nagasawa Gallery (Tokyo), and works from Canadian Arctic and by other contemporary Inuit artists at Feheley Fine Arts (Toronto). Zürcher Gallery will feature a solo show of drawings by American poet Ted Joans (1928-2003) and James Barron will exhibit the work of Janet Sobel (1893–1968), whose abstract paintings were championed by Peggy Guggenheim in the 1940s and were recently featured in a solo exhibition at Houston’s Menil Collection.

OAF 2025 will welcome eighteen first-time exhibitors, including Akio Nagasawa Gallery (Tokyo), BravinLee Programs (New York), Court Tree Collective (Brooklyn), Diamond (New York), Espacio KB (Bogota), Elza Kayal Gallery (New York), The FolkArtwork Collective (Des Moines, Iowa), Hughes at Olsen (Sydney, Australia), Interact Center for Visual & Performing Arts (St. Paul, MN), Gallery jones (Vancouver), Galerie Kahn (Ars-en-Ré, France), Keith De Lellis Gallery (New York), Modesti Perdriolle Gallery (Brussels), Claire Oliver Gallery (New York), Pan American Art Projects (Miami), Peninsula Art Space (New York), Plataforma ArtBase (Mexico City), and Van Der Plaas (New York).
“The 2025 Outsider Art Fair is a testament to the rich diversity of our field, and as always, embraces art from the fringes,” said Andrew Edlin, the fair’s owner. “As the art world continues to catch on to the power of the work our exhibitors have been championing for decades, a new generation of OAF dealers is discovering artists who will become part of the canon in years to come.”
OUTSIDER ART FAIR 2025 EXHIBITORS

Aarne Anton/Nexus Singularity (Pomona, NY)
Akio Nagasawa Gallery (Tokyo)
Bill Arning Exhibitions (Kinderhook, NY)
Arts of Life/Circle Contemporary (Chicago)
bg Gallery (Los Angeles)
James Barron Art (Kent, CT)
Margaret Bodell/ Revival Arts (Milford, CT)
Henry Boxer Gallery (London)
BravinLee Programs (New York)
Norman Brosterman (New York)
Cavin-Morris Gallery (New York)
Center for Creative Works (Wynnewood, PA)
Court Tree Collective (Brooklyn)
Creative Growth Art Center (Oakland, CA)
Creativity Explored (San Francisco)
M. David & Co. (Brooklyn)
Diamond (New York)
dieFirma (New York)
Dutton (New York)
Andrew Edlin Gallery (New York)
Elza Kayal Gallery (New York)
Espacio KB (Bogotá)
Feheley Fine Arts (Toronto)
Fleisher/Ollman Gallery (Philadelphia)
The FolkArtwork Collective (Des Moines, IA)
Fountain House (New York)
Hana Pietri Presents (Chicago)
Harman Projects (New York)
Marion Harris (New York and CT)
Hughes at Olsen (Sydney, Australia)
Interact Center for the Visual and Performing Arts (St. Paul, MN)
Gallery Jones (Vancouver)
Galerie Kahn (Ars-en-Ré, France)
Kishka Gallery & Library (White River Junction, VT)
koelsch gallery (Houston)
Yukiko Koide Presents (Kyoto, Japan)
LAND Gallery (Brooklyn)
Jennifer Lauren Gallery (Manchester, UK)
Keith De Lellis Gallery (New York)
Galerie Pol Lemétais (Toulouse, France)
Lindsay Gallery (Columbus, OH)
Joshua Lowenfels Works of Art (New York)
Magic Markings (New York)
Modesti Perdriolle Gallery (Brussels)
North Pole Studio (Portland, OR)
Northern Daughters (Vergennes, VT)
Claire Oliver Gallery (New York)
Pan American Art Projects (Miami)
Peninsula Art Space (New York)
Plataforma ArtBase (Montreal / Mexico City)
Portrait Society Gallery (Milwaukee)
Steven S. Powers (New York
PULP (Holyoke, MA)
Pure Vision Arts (New York)
Ricco/Maresca Gallery (New York)
Ritsch-Fisch Galerie (Strasbourg, France)
The Ruffed Grouse Gallery (Narrowsburg, NY)
SAGE Studio (Austin, TX)
SARAHCROWN (New York)
Shelter Gallery (New York)
SHRINE (Los Angeles /New York)
Stellarhighway (Brooklyn)
Stewart Gallery (Boise, ID)
Van Der Plas Gallery (New York)
Wilsonville (East Hampton, NY)
Zürcher Gallery (New York)

NOT IN NEW YORK?
The Online Viewing Room of the OAF 2025 
will be live on February 27th

OUTSIDER ART FAIR 2025
Metropolitan Pavilion
125 West 18th Street New York, NY 10011

05/10/24

Pascal Vonlanthen @ Collection de l’Art Brut, Lausanne

Pascal Vonlanthen
Collection de l’Art Brut, Lausanne
14 juin - 27 octobre 2024

PASCAL VONLANTHEN
rücünesLicht, 2020
Encre de Chine et feutre sur papier
70 x 100 cm
Atelier de numérisation - Ville de Lausanne (AN)
Collection de l'Art Brut, Lausanne

PASCAL VONLANTHEN
sans titre, 2019
Feutre et encre de Chine sur papier
50 x 70 cm
Atelier de numérisation - Ville de Lausanne (AN)
Collection de l'Art Brut, Lausanne

PASCAL VONLANTHEN
sans titre, 2019
Encre de Chine sur papier, 50 x 70 cm
Atelier de numérisation - Ville de Lausanne (AN)
Collection de l'Art Brut, Lausanne

PASCAL VONLANTHEN
sans titre, 2020
Encre de Chine sur papier, 70 x 50 cm
Atelier de numérisation - Ville de Lausanne (AN)
Collection de l'Art Brut, Lausanne

Fasciné par la typographie des titres et l’agencement des textes, PASCAL VONLANTHEN recopie à sa façon les pages de journaux, de magazines ou de dépliants publicitaires. Ne maîtrisant pas la lecture, il s’approprie les codes d’un langage qu’il n’est pas en mesure de décrypter. En une dizaine d’années, il a ainsi créé un corpus original d’écritures asémiques, dépourvues de syntaxe, mais dotées d’une grande puissance formelle.

Si au début, les lettres tracées dans ses compositions ont une certaine ressemblance avec celles du modèle imprimé, et permettent parfois de reconnaître l’incipit d’un article, très vite la lecture bute sur des lettres inversées, des chiffres épars, une suite qui défie la logique, des lignes qui s’étirent sans espaces entre les mots et sans ponctuation, ou une même lettre qui se répète de manière de plus en plus abstraite. À la rigidité des caractères typographiques Pascal Vonlanthen oppose une calligraphie qui s’étale par vagues ou par colonnes dans un mouvement ondulatoire. Son écriture se déploie avec une sorte de logique grégaire : la forme de chaque lettre influence la suivante, et chaque ligne s’accorde sur le mouvement de celle qui la précède, dans une dynamique qui rappelle le vol des étourneaux. Parfois, des masses abstraites comme des nuages imposent leur volume ; ailleurs, lettres et images se partagent la composition et l’écriture devient aussi figurative, grâce à la présence d’animaux ou de formes embryonnaires. L’auteur alterne les petits formats au feutre noir ou coloré à la pointe fine, et les grands au marqueur sur papier ou carton d’emballage, jusqu’à atteindre la démesure avec un rouleau de huit mètres de long.

À une époque où les moyens de communication envahissent notre existence avec leur flux continu d’informations, l’élégance purement visuelle et silencieuse des écritures de Pascal Vonlanthen exerce un attrait irrésistible qui transcende les frontières linguistiques.

Né à Rossens, un village du canton de Fribourg, en Suisse, Pascal Vonlanthen (1957) a grandi à la campagne. Depuis 1998, il fréquente l’atelier CREAHM situé dans ce même canton. Pendant les quinze premières années de son activité artistique, le monde de la ferme a été sa principale source d’inspiration. Dans ses dessins au crayon gris ou au pastel, poules, vaches et lapins, outils et ustensiles divers se retrouvent alignés comme les caractères d’une écriture imagée. C’est à partir de 2014 que ses œuvres sont devenues plus graphiques.

Après avoir fait l’acquisition de neuf œuvres de Pascal Vonlanthen, entre 2020 et 2021, la Collection de l’Art Brut présente pour la première fois un large ensemble de ses créations dans le cadre de cette exposition monographique.

Commissariat : Teresa Maranzano, historienne de l’art.

COLLECTION DE L'ART BRUT, LAUSANNE
11, avenue des Bergières, 1004 Lausanne

01/10/24

Clemens Wild @ Collection de l’Art Brut, Lausanne

Clemens Wild
Collection de l’Art Brut, Lausanne
14 juin - 27 octobre 2024

CLEMENS WILD
Sam, 2016
Acrylique, feutre, mine de plomb
et crayon de couleur sur papier
219 x 99,5 cm
Atelier de numérisation - Ville de Lausanne (AN)
Collection de l'Art Brut, Lausanne

CLEMENS WILD
Anjuli, 2016
Acrylique, feutre, mine de plomb
et crayon de couleur sur papier
210,5 x 99,5 cm
Atelier de numérisation - Ville de Lausanne (AN)
Collection de l'Art Brut, Lausanne

Elles s’appellent Babsi, Sam ou Uschi. Ce sont les protagonistes des peintures de CLEMENS WILD. Leurs silhouettes et leurs poses, avec cigarettes, coiffures et tenues colorées, composent une galerie de femmes au destin cabossé, mais dignes et sans complexes. Elles partagent des métiers humbles, une position sociale précaire, des origines lointaines, et racontent leur histoire, leurs tracas, leurs ambitions et leurs loisirs.

Clemens Wild permet aux femmes qui travaillent dans l’ombre de sortir de l’invisibilité sociale. Solidaire, l’auteur a lui-même connu la marginalisation. Il vit depuis 1982 à la Humanushaus, une résidence sociale anthroposophique située près de Berne (Suisse). C’est en observant les femmes qui travaillent dans la cuisine, les appartements et les ateliers de cette institution pour personnes en situation de handicap que l’idée lui est venue de leur rendre hommage.

CLEMENS WILD
Romy, 2013
Acrylique, feutre, mine de plomb
et crayon de couleur sur papier
198,5 x 75 cm
Atelier de numérisation - Ville de Lausanne (AN)
Collection de l'Art Brut, Lausanne

CLEMENS WILD
Mila, Walpurga, Sabine, 2021
Mine de plomb, crayon de couleur,
feutre et peinture acrylique sur papier
210,5 x 99,5 cm
Atelier de numérisation - Ville de Lausanne (AN)
Collection de l'Art Brut, Lausanne

Issu d’une famille de libraires, Clemens Wild (1964) cultive depuis l’enfance la passion pour le dessin et les récits imaginaires. Les fictions qu’il se plaît à écrire et dessiner sont pour lui une manière d’appréhender le monde qui l’entoure. Parmi les femmes qui composent sa galerie, certaines reviennent régulièrement depuis une quarantaine d’année. L’auteur les représente de manière frontale et statique, ou en train d’accomplir des tâches quotidienne sur leurs lieux de travail : cuisine, WC, ateliers, etc. Elles bavardent à la pause-café, attendent à l’arrêt de bus. Clemens Wild prend soin de leur donner une personnalité unique : leurs tenues n’obéissent jamais aux normes des habits de travail standardisés, mais diffèrent les unes des autres, tout en restant réalistes et fonctionnelles. Aucun détail n’échappe à son sens de l’observation, entraîné depuis des années au sein du microcosme de l’Humanushaus.

L’auteur exploite toutes sortes de formats et de supports qu’il récupère : papier Kraft, feuilles A4, couvercles de boîtes en carton ou petits sacs en papier. Il rédige aussi des textes dans lesquels les sujets féminins se présentent. En plus de donner vie à chaque personnage, ces calligraphies au feutre noir dialoguent avec l’image et la complètent, en lui conférant un fort impact visuel.

Depuis 2012, Clemens Wild fréquente l’atelier bernois Rohling. Grâce à l’infrastructure dont il dispose sur place, aux rencontres avec d’autres artistes, aux expositions et aux voyages auxquels il participe, sa pratique artistique a pris de l’ampleur, elle est devenue plus complexe, et sa critique sociale s’est aiguisée.

La Collection de l’Art Brut, qui a fait l’acquisition de douze œuvres de Clemens Wild en 2024, présente pour la première fois un large ensemble de ses créations, dans le cadre de cette exposition monographique.

Commissariat : Teresa Maranzano, historienne de l’art

COLLECTION DE L'ART BRUT, LAUSANNE
11, avenue des Bergières, 1004 Lausanne

24/02/24

Anthony Dominguez Exhibition @ Andrew Edlin Gallery, New York - "Kindness Cruelty Continuum"

Anthony Dominguez 
Kindness Cruelty Continuum 
Andrew Edlin Gallery, New York 
February 24 – April 6, 2024 

Andrew Edlin Gallery presents a solo exhibition of works by ANTHONY DOMINGUEZ (1960-2014), an artist who chose to live unhoused in New York City for more than twenty years. It is the late artist’s first exhibition at the gallery.

Anthony Dominguez was the son of a successful commercial artist in Fort Worth, Texas. He immersed himself in art from an early age and later took university art courses, but  never earned a degree. While in his twenties he moved to New York, where he found work at a commercial printing company.

At the end of the 1980s, Anthony Dominguez abandoned his East Village apartment, tossed his possessions and art materials into a dumpster, and spent the rest of his life as a homeless wanderer. Spending most of his time in New York, he forsook any semblance of security, sheltering in tunnels, cardboard boxes, and other hideaways. To his way of thinking, he had set himself free.

Anthony Dominguez never stopped making art and left a substantial body of distinctive work, all made from scavenged materials. Early pieces include small, black-fabric discs whose uniquely stylized imagery is imprinted with custom-made stencils and bleach applied with hypodermic syringes. Dominguez intended these round patches to be sewn onto clothing, and covered his own jacket with them.

This jacket caught the attention of Aarne and Tina Anton, who became the first to exhibit Anthony Dominguez’s work—at Art on the Edge, Tina’s nonprofit studio for homeless artists, and later at Aarne’s gallery, American Primitive, both in Lower Manhattan. Anthony Dominguez was represented by Art on the Edge until it closed in 1996, after which American Primitive showed his work until the gallery closed in 2020.

Exposure to a receptive audience propelled Anthony Dominguez into a more ambitious mode. He started creating larger, rectangular-format paintings that didn’t rely on stenciled imagery, although they retained the stark, white-on-black palette. He also began to expand his thematic focus, centered on his philosophy of radical freedom.

Anthony Dominguez’s early paintings portray the actions of stylized humanoid figures and skeletons in abstracted, stage-like settings. Often appearing in these compact narratives are butterflies, traditional emblems of metamorphosis. The overarching theme is the cyclical interplay of life and death. The artist typically worked on loose canvas or other fabrics scavenged from the Garment District. He stacked and rolled the paintings for easy storage.

The exhibition title references one of his most elaborate works, an untitled painting on a five-by-nine-foot sheet of black fabric. Kindness Cruelty Continuum was painted in a tunnel where it functioned as a mural. Anthony Dominguez removed it from the premises shortly before the building directly overhead burned down. Reminiscent of a game board, it features an intricate structure of stripped-down, stylized imagery including stairways, skulls, butterflies, a world globe, and a dozen tiny, anonymous stick figures, some bearing celebratory goblets. An arrow in the upper right, marked ‘EXIT,’ indicates the game’s apparent endpoint, where a skull adjoins a butterfly wing and a figure carrying a knapsack on a stick—sign of the archetypal homeless wanderer—ascends into the unknown beyond.

For years Anthony Dominguez relied exclusively on the white/black formula—metaphorically resonant as well as convenient, since it only required one color. He used paint he found in trash bins and scoured the streets for his implements—plastic condiment dispensers, drafting tools, and pens or brushes he made from found materials. Continually refining his style and technique, Dominguez expanded the range of his imagery and treated his themes with increasing nuance and narrative invention.

Around 2006, Anthony Dominguez made a hundred-and-eighty-degree turn to painting in black on white canvas—a change that highlighted his work’s graphic punch. He subsequently switched the combination back and forth—white-on-black, black-on-white—depending on the materials at hand.

In 2011 Anthony Dominguez taught himself to read and write music and learned to make pennywhistle flutes by boring holes in pieces of plastic plumbing pipe. In an open-ended series he called Picture Songs, he began adding music and lyrics to his paintings. It was the first of three significant developments in his art as he passed his fiftieth birthday.

Second was a new addition to his palette—red, the color of blood and, by association, the heart.

Third was the emergence of overtly Christian iconography, imagery, and song lyrics. Crosses and stylized portraits of Jesus repeatedly appear in his late paintings—a development perhaps rooted in his Roman Catholic upbringing, but also reflecting his interest in early Christian mysticism.

In 2013 he returned to Fort Worth to see his beloved Aunt Celia, who was very ill and died before the year was out. He stayed into 2014 to take care of family business, then headed back to New York, stopping about twenty-five miles short of the city. In a thinly populated part of New Jersey, his body was found in a wooded area, where he’d evidently hanged himself from a railroad trestle.  Significantly, it was Holy Saturday, commemorating the interval between Jesus’s Crucifixion and the Resurrection.

During his lifetime Anthony Dominguez’s work was shown in New York at American Primitive Gallery, Cavin-Morris, Clayton Gallery, and the Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning; in Philadelphia at Janet Fleisher Gallery; in Baltimore at the American Visionary Art Museum; in Charleston, South Carolina, at the Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art, College of Charleston; and in the Czech Republic at the Galerie U Recickych, Prague. His work will be included in the forthcoming exhibition: 

Frances Tosquelles: Avant-Garde Psychiatry and the Birth of Art Brut opening in April, 2024 at the American Folk Art Museum, New York  (April 12 – August 18, 2024).

ANDREW EDLIN GALLERY 
212 Bowery, New York, NY 10012