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Mildred Glimcher, Jean Dubuffet: Towards an Alternative Reality. New York: Pace Gallery 1987 ISBN 0-89659-782-2; Mechthild Haas, Jean Dubuffet, Berlin: Reimer, 1997 (German) ISBN 3-49601-176-9; Jean Dubuffet, Paris: Centre Georges Pompidou, 2001 ISBN 2-84426-093-4; Laurent Danchin, Jean Dubuffet, New York: Vilo International, 2001 ISBN 2-87939 ...
Aloïse Blanche Corbaz (28 June 1886 – 5 April 1964) was a Swiss outsider artist included in Jean Dubuffet's initial collection of psychiatric art. She is one of very few acclaimed female outsider artists.
La Chiffonnière ("Rag Woman") [1] is a stainless steel sculpture by French artist Jean Dubuffet, installed in Justin Herman Plaza, [2] [3] in San Francisco's Financial District, in the U.S. state of California. The 22-foot (6.7 m) tall, 4,500 pound artwork was conceived in 1972 and completed in 1978.
Aéroports de Paris Exhibits Jean Dubuffet - the Hourloupe Cycle; from Painting to Monumental Sculpture, in the Espace Musées (Museum Area) of Paris-Charles De Gaulle Airport PARIS--(BUSINESS ...
Koczy's work is housed in institutions such as the Guggenheim (both in New York and Venice), the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center, the Milwaukee Art Museum, the Kupferberg Holocaust Resource Center and Art Gallery/Museum, the Collection de l'art brut in Lausanne (where in 1985 she inaugurated Jean Dubuffet's Neuve Invention Annex ...
Dubuffet took an interest to all forms of non-Western music as an inspiration for his artwork, but only in 1960-1961 he would claim to have achieved an equivalence between both forms of art, when he created his own Musical Experiences (1961), largely experimental musical compositions.
Cows and Groomers is an oil painting on canvas by the French artist Jean Dubuffet, dated from August 1943.It is held in the collection of the Unterlinden Museum in Colmar, Alsace (inventory number 2008.8.22). [2]
The Hourloupe cycle, and this work, also reflect Dubuffet's affinity for “art brut”—art produced by children, psychiatric patients, and other untrained artists. In addition, although Dubuffet did not consider himself a Surrealist, he was influenced by the surrealist interest in the unconscious. [1]