Monday 16 January 2017

Why the market for Outsider Art is booming in New York

SAVA SECULIC, das Haus, undated, 36 x 41cm, Courtesy Delmes & Zander

Why the market for Outsider Art is booming in New York
 
Susan Moore about the Outsider Art market on Apollo Magazine.com 15th January, 2017

In an era of what might be dubbed Outsider Politics, it seems hardly surprising that Outsider Art is attracting a growing audience. It is 70 years since Jean Dubuffet coined the term Art Brut, and 45 years since Roger Cardinal’s Outsider Art provided its English synonym. For Dubuffet, Art Brut was work ‘produced by persons unscathed by artistic culture, where mimicry plays no part (contrary to the activities of intellectuals). These artists derive everything […] from their own depths, and not from the conventions of classical or fashionable art.’ While Dubuffet’s focus was on the marginalised and mentally ill, the parameters of what constitutes Outsider Art have continued to expand to embrace the work of any self-taught artist operating outside the mainstream. It is the apparent cynicism or lack of integrity – not to mention the cost – of so much of that mainstream that has fuelled interest in this parallel alternative tradition. As the New York gallerist James Fuentes recently told Bloomberg – appropriately enough in the vernacular – Outsider Art is ‘a f***ing breath of fresh air.’

This month sees the 25th anniversary edition of the Outsider Art Fair in New York (Metropolitan Pavilion, 19–22 January), and Christie’s New York staging its second dedicated auction, Courageous Spirits: Outsider and Vernacular Art (20 January), alongside the season’s sales of Americana and folk art. Even the city’s MoSex – the Museum of Sex – is tapping into the Zeitgeist with ‘Known/Unknown: Private Obsession and Hidden Desire in Outsider Art’ (19 January–16 September).

One of the earliest and most influential artists associated with Art Brut was the uneducated and psychotic Adolf Wölfli, who began to draw obsessively after his incarceration in the Waldau Clinic in Bern in 1895. His methods were carefully observed and documented by the psychiatrist Dr Walter Morgenthaler who published the seminal Ein Geisteskranker als Kunstler (A Psychiatric Patient as Artist) in 1921. Wolfli’s output of pencil and coloured pencil drawings was vast, and his typically densely worked and complex Bangali Firework Bänggaalisches Feuerwärk of 1926 ($155,000) is one of the highlights of this year’s OAF. The work is shown by Andrew Edlin, the dealer who acquired the event in 2012 and has overseen the tripling of its audience – as well as the foundation of a Paris edition in 2013. (...)

Read more here: 
www.apollo-magazine.com

1 comment:

  1. Thank you for a very interesting article on outsider art. I greatly appreciate the time you take to do all the research to put together your posts. I especially enjoyed this one!!

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