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Art brut

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Art brut
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Art Brut
(Beginning in 1945)
Art Brut ("Raw Art" or "Rough Art" in French) is a label created by French painter Jean Dubuffet to describe art created outside the boundaries of official culture. Dubuffet focused particularly on the art of the insane.

Wider Than Art Brut
If Dubuffet's concept of Art Brut is largely confined to works by marginalized and maladjusted individuals, the English concept of Outsider art is wider, and embraces works by uneducated, self-taught (naive) artists, ...

Art Brut
The term Art Brut was first used by the painter Jean Dubuffet to refer to a range of art forms outside the conventional dictates of the art world.

art brut - French for "raw art," Jean Dubuffet (1901-1985) devised this name in 1945 for the art of children and outsiders (naïve artists and the mentally ill); actually, anyone not producing art for profit or recognition.

Art brut: French for "raw art", the art of children and outsiders (naive artists and the mentally ill); actually, anyone not producing art for profit or recognition.

Art Brut.
The idea of "Art Brut" appeared around 1945. Its conception is generally attributed to the French painter Jean Dubuffet who meant by the term "works executed by those immune to artistic culture in which imitation has no role; ...

Art Brut (c. 1950): painting, prints, works on paper, sculpture. Invented by Jean Dubuffet, Art Brut was created as "raw" art by individuals who existed completely outside of society and the world of art schools, galleries and museums.

Art Brut
Coined in 1945 by French artist Jean Dubuffet (1901-1985), the word is French for 'raw art'. It refers to the art of Outsiders---naïve artists, the mentally ill, and the art of children---persons isolated from main society.

Art Brut
Term coined in 1945 by Jean Dubuffet (1901-1985). French for "raw art". Refers to the art of Outsiders (naïve artists, the mentally ill, and the art of children.) Art not produced for recognition or profit.

Art Brut: literally translated from French means "raw art"; 'Raw' in that it has not been through the 'cooking' process: the art world of art schools, galleries, museums.

Art Brut
(French term meaning 'Raw Art')
Term coined by Jean Dubuffet to describe the creative work of the self-taught and those who are untrained and who work outside the hierarchy of traditional art forms and means.

Art Brut
Raw Art
Visionary Art
More on Outsider Art
Timeline of Outsider Art from the Tate
Map of Outsider Art Around the World
The Owl House of Helen Martins ...

Art Brut: - [ah(r) broo] A term coined by French painter Jean Dubuffet for the art of untrained people, especially mental patients, prisoners, and socially dispossessed persons generally.

By 1945 he had started to collect so called 'ugly art' or Art Brut, and in 1948 he founded a society to promote this type of work.

Also called 'Outsider art' & 'Art brut'. Traditional representations, usually bound by conventions in both form and content, of a folkloric character and usually made by persons without institutionalized training.

Primitive art, by an untrained artist who paints in the common tradition of his community and reflects the life style of the people. Also called 'Outsider art' & 'Art brut'.

FORESHORTENING ...

Also see Aboriginal art, art brut, attention, attitude, effort, expression, expressive qualities, focus, gestalt, meaning, memory, monotony, motivation, naive, paint-by-number, pattern, perception, pique assiette (also called picassiette), ...

Adolf Wölflis Irren-Anstalt Band-Hain, 1910 The term Outsider Art was coined by art critic Roger Cardinal in 1972 as an English synonym for Art Brut (which literally translates as Raw Art or Rough Art), ...

See also: Painting, Movement, Expression, Sculpture, Fine art

Fine arts Art and craftsArt criticism

 
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