Jean Dubuffet (1901-1985)
began painting at the age of seventeen and studied briefly at the Académie
Julian, Paris.
He lived in Montparnasse, where, in addition
to painting, he read widely in ethnology, paleography, and ancient and modern
literature. After seven years, he abandoned painting and became a wine
merchant. During the thirties, he painted again for a short time, but it was
not until 1942 that he began the work which has distinguished him as an
outstanding innovator in postwar European painting.
Dubuffet's interest in art
brut, the art of the insane, and that of the untrained person, whether a
caveman or the originator of contemporary graffiti, led him to emulate this
directly expressive and untutored style in his own work. His paintings from the
early forties in brightly colored oils were soon followed by works in which he
employed such unorthodox materials as cement, plaster, tar, and
asphalt-scraped, carved and cut and drawn upon with a rudimentary, spontaneous
line. Variations of this method of working preoccupied him until 1962, when he
wrote and illustrated a book, L'Hourloupe, in which he evolved a new stylistic
and ideological concept for his later work, both paintings and plastic
sculpture.
In addition to his
paintings and sculptures, Dubuffet has been a prolific writer, the author of
several volumes of essays and letters that are poetic and whimsical in spirit,
comparable to his work as a painter.
American interest in
Dubuffet began with his exhibition at the Pierre Matisse Gallery in New York in 1947 and continued with retrospectives at
both the Museum of Modern Art and the Solomon
R. Guggenheim
Museum in New York. An example of his outdoor
sculpture, well known to New Yorkers, Groupe de Quatre Arbres from 1969-72, is
located at Chase Manhattan Plaza
downtown. In addition, examples of his work can be found in the following
museums: Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.; The
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Musée National d'Art Moderne, Centre
Georges Pompidou, Paris; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Solomon R.
Guggenheim, New York; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; and the Tate Gallery,
London.