Jean Dubuffet´s Art Brut, the Origins of the Collection - extended until september 25, 2016 - March 5 through August 28, 2016


Jean Dubuffet´s Art Brut, the Origins of the Collection - extended until september 25, 2016
"Many slight works, brief, almost lacking form, ring out very loudly indeed; and for that reason they are preferable to many monumental works by illustrious professionals."   (cf. Art Brut Preferred to the Cultural Arts, Jean Dubuffet, 1949).

February 2016 marks the fortieth anniversary of the Collection de l'Art Brut: The occasion merits a return to the origin of the Art Brut concept, as invented by the French artist Jean Dubuffet, and a celebration of the museum's existence, such as it was instigated by Dubuffet's donation of his Collection to the City of Lausanne on February 26th 1976.
In commemoration of  this anniversary, we are mounting the exhibition L'Art Brut de Jean Dubuffet, aux origines de la collection [Jean Dubuffet's Art Brut, from the Collection's Origins]. The show is to feature over 150 pieces exclusively from the Collection de l'Art Brut holdings, and such as Jean Dubuffet himself had selected them for the historic fall 1949 exhibition held at the René Drouin Gallery in Paris.  The latter exhibition was the first that the artist mounted outside the Compagnie de l'Art Brut walls: instead, he chose to show at a Vendôme Square gallery that was very popular with the post-war Parisian art fans.
To revisit this major event some sixty-seven years later allows us to take full measure of the audacity it bespoke at the time and its tremendous critical impact. Imagine labeling as "art" —and this in 1949—pieces made by self-taught strangers to the cultural circles of the day! This was to question the very idea of art, and what it was seen to represent at the time.
The upcoming exhibition is also a chance for us to group the works that Dubuffet collected between 1945, when Art Brut was first conceived, and 1949: in other words, the pieces constituting the original core of today's Collection de l'Art Brut. As such, drawings and sculptures by creators who today enjoy popular recognition—the likes of Aloïse, Adolf Wölfli and Auguste Forestier—sit side by side with works whose creators remain anonymous, with pieces in the vein of folk art or naive art, and even with several children's drawings. And all of these were grouped together already in 1949, under what Jean Dubuffet chose to designate as "Art Brut."
The challenging exhibition catalogue title chosen by René Drouin at the time - L'art brut préféré aux arts culturels [Art Brut preferred to the cultural arts], together with the lampoonist catalogue text penned by Dubuffet , make it clear that in the latter's eyes, Art Brut represents a manifesto redefining what is labeled as official art: "...real art is always just where it is not expected. Where nobody would think of it nor speak out its name. [...] It walks about everywhere; everyone has met it somewhere along the way, running into it twenty times a day at every street corner, but not a single one of them who might get the idea it could be Mr. Art himself, whom everyone speaks of in the best of terms. Because he simply doesn't look like him."

Curator: Sarah Lombardi, Director of the Collection de l'Art Brut
Scientific collaboration:
Astrid Berglund, exhibition curator
Vincent Monod, Head of Library and Imagery

THE EXHIBITION JEAN DUBUFFET'S ART BRUT
IN THE MEDIAS:

Practical information

Dates

5 march - 28 august 2016
Extended until september 25, 2016


Opening reception

friday 4 march 2016, 6:00 pm



Exhibition curator

Sarah Lombardi, Director of the Collection de l'Art Brut
Scientific collaboration:
Astrid Berglund, exhibition curator
Vincent Monod, Head of Library and Imagery


Publications

L'Art Brut de Jean Dubuffet, aux origines de la collection [Jean Dubuffet's Art Brut, at the Collection's Origins], directed by Sarah Lombardi, with texts by Sarah Lombardi a.o., Lausanne, Paris: Collection de l'Art Brut, Flammarion, 2016, 224 pp, 170 color illus., bilingual French/English.


Access    

The L'Art Brut de Jean Dubuffet, aux origines de la collection exhibition is not accessible to persons with reduced mobility.

Free guided tour
duration 60 min

Saturday 19 march at 2pm
by Sarah Lombardi, director of the Collection de l’Art Brut
Saturday 4 june  at 2pm
online booking, within the limits of the seats available.

Guided tours for the public at large are scheduled for the same times as the Young People's workshops.


Young public workshop (ages 6-12)
Duration 1h45/ Fee: 10.- per child

Saturday 19 march at 2pm
Saturday 23 april at 2pm
Saturday 4 june at 2pm
online booking, within the limits of the seats available.

Guided tours

Upon request for groups and classes: in French, German, English and Italian.

Free guided tour for teachers (duration 60 min)

Thursday 17 march at 5pm
online booking, within the limits of the seats available.


Anniversary weekend

Museum entry and activities free of charge.

March 4, 6PM: Opening Reception for the exhibition, open to the public
March 5, non-stop from 1 to 5PM: family workshop, from age 5
March 5, 7PM: Jacques Roman reads texts by Jean Dubuffet, followed by a Meeting with Jean-Claude Drouin and Michel Thévoz, who will lead a discussion about Jean Dubuffet as personality. Exceptionally, the museum closing time will be extended to 7pm.
March 6, 2 and 4PM: Les visites de Monsieur Jean [Mister John's Tours]. Duration: 40 mins.  Guided tours of the Permanent Collection by the actor Romain Daroles. Stage directing: Nicolas Zlatoff.

Accessibility

The exhibition Jean Dubuffet´s Art Brut, the Origins of the Collection - extended until september 25, 2016 is not accessible to people with reduced mobility.

Biography-ies

Shop