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- <text id=93TT0256>
- <title>
- July 26, 1993: An Outlaw Who Loved Laws
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 26, 1993 The Flood Of '93
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ART, Page 62
- An Outlaw Who Loved Laws
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>France's Jean Dubuffet proclaimed himself a raw radical, but
- a new show displays his ease with nuance and tradition
- </p>
- <p>By ROBERT HUGHES
- </p>
- <p> The show of paintings and sculpture by Jean Dubuffet, now at
- the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, is
- not exactly a retrospective. It covers only 20 years of the
- artist's working life, from 1943 to 1963. And the 100 or so
- works in it represent only about 1% of his enormous output.
- But Dubuffet was so visually loquacious that a full retrospective
- would be indigestible--he repeated himself endlessly, especially
- in his later years. And by the same token, most of his best
- work was done in those first two decades, before he got down
- to filling the world's collections with the wiggly-jigsaw-style
- images that he derived from his "Hourloupe" series of 1963 and
- that, seen in any quantity, are such a repetitious drag.
- </p>
- <p> In its effort to present Dubuffet as one of the four truly important
- figures of postwar European art--along with Giacometti, Bacon
- and Beuys--the Hirshhorn has taken the right tack, for it's
- the early work that justifies the claim. Dubuffet came to art
- late. Until 1943, when he turned 41, he had been a businessman,
- a wine merchant. His career illustrates the energy that a late
- flowering can produce, both in art and in its attendant ideas.
- Dubuffet is, of course, widely known for his espousal of what
- he called Art Brut, or "raw art," the work of those untutored
- and compulsive creators now called "outsider artists." Was he
- a primitive himself? Of course not: his art is as sophisticated
- as his writing, and in his apparent desire to shake off the
- burden of French culture, he was quintessentially French.
- </p>
- <p> In the beginning, Dubuffet appealed to Ubu buffs: people with
- a taste for the macaronic and the absurd, who saw in his work
- a visual resurgence of the anti authoritarian wit whose chief
- image in French literature was the grotesque kinglet of Poland
- invented nearly a century ago by Alfred Jarry in his play Ubu
- Roi. From the moment Ubu waddled onstage and pronounced his
- first line, "Merdrrre!," the vaporous culture of Symbolism was
- on the way out and something newer and indubitably nastier was
- on its way in. "After us the Savage God," noted W.B. Yeats,
- who was in the audience that night.
- </p>
- <p> In Parisian painting, Dubuffet had a comparable effect at the
- end of World War II. One critic headlined a review, in imitation
- of the Dubonnet ads one used to see on the Metro, UBU--DU
- BLUFF--DUBUFFET, and others were not wrong in detecting, in
- Dubuffet's entranced and ironic use of thick pastes, an excremental
- vision parallel to Jarry's. One of the portraits of French intellectuals
- in his extravagantly controversial 1947 show at the Galerie
- Rene Drouin depicted the Surrealist writer Georges Limbour under
- the title Limbour Fashioned from Chicken Droppings. And even
- critics who disliked such mordant images were right on target
- about the context into which Dubuffet emerged, that of a postwar
- Paris depressed by material shortages and riven by political
- suspicions. "An empty pantry," wrote one critic, "assures the
- triumph of a Dubuffet."
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, somewhere near the heart of Dubuffet's idea of a poor
- art, a raw art, was a large and genuinely democratic tolerance.
- "The persons I find beautiful," he wrote in a catalog preface,
- "are not those who are usually found beautiful...Funny noses,
- big mouths, teeth all crooked, hair in the ears--I'm not at
- all against such things. Older people don't necessarily appear
- worse to me than younger ones." Of course, Dubuffet's nudes
- in the 1950s are sexist, as sexist as Rabelais--those rosy-brown,
- squashed-flat, gross and scarily funny "Corps de Dames" that
- form such a spectacular counterpart to the women De Kooning
- was painting on the other side of the Atlantic at about the
- same time. But no moral nitpicker today could accuse Dubuffet
- of ageism or lookism.
- </p>
- <p> As art historian Susan J. Cooke points out in an interesting
- catalog essay, Dubuffet's portraits of French intellectuals
- were something more than "literary portraits," as such things
- might be understood in London or New York City. They dropped,
- under the decidedly ambiguous title "More Handsome Than They
- Think," into a culture that had always put a high symbolic value
- on the idea of the writer as conscience of the society. And
- this was at a time when quite a few writers (such as Pierre
- Drieu la Rochelle, editor of the prestigious La Nouvelle Revue
- Francaise) had betrayed that idea by siding with the Nazis,
- and when the air was thick with charges of wartime collaboration
- by intellectuals.
- </p>
- <p> Some of Dubuffet's subjects, like Jean Paulhan, had impeccable
- Resistance records. Others, like Paul Leautaud--a brilliant
- aphorist--decidedly did not. So when Dubuffet put a portrait
- of Leautaud, wrinkled like a tortoise or (as his title had it)
- "a red-skinned sorcerer," into the same portrait show as Paulhan
- or his friend the painter Jean Fautrier, what was he up to?
- Ironizing, certainly, on the idea of the portrait as effigy
- of virtue. But also--despite his often repeated claim to reject
- tradition absolutely--paying complete homage to an earlier
- French artist: Honore Daumier, whose tiny clay effigies of politico-literary
- notables known as Les Celebrites du Juste-Milieu, wizened, compressed
- and distorted, are the obvious and inescapable grandfathers
- of all Dubuffet's turnip men.
- </p>
- <p> Nothing remains anti-taste for long. Just as some new art (not
- all) starts ugly and becomes beautiful, so works of art that
- begin their career surrounded by announcements of a new start,
- a radical primitivism, tend to find a level where--surprise!--their ancestors emerge from the closet. So it is with Dubuffet,
- who never ceased to insist that he was kicking free from the
- conventions of Western culture, starting with the idea of beauty
- itself. Yet his attachment to rural images from earlier French
- art, particularly the earthy fields of Millet, is pervasive
- and obvious; some of his "Texturologies" might as well be exaggeratedly
- close-up paintings of the life of the soil done by a microbiologist
- under the spell of the Barbizon school.
- </p>
- <p> These have sometimes been interpreted as the most radical of
- Dubuffet's works because they are the most apparently abstract.
- But Dubuffet didn't see them that way at all. No matter how
- small the teeming signs got, they still represented something--a point the artist later emphasized by cutting some of them
- up and using them as the facial hair in his hilarious sequence
- of bearded heads, such as Beard of Stubborn Refusal, 1959.
- </p>
- <p> The funniest and most agrestic of all his paintings were, undoubtedly,
- the cows--a snook cocked at Picasso's heroic Spanish bulls.
- Kippered there on the canvas in their dense yet somehow airy
- paint, yearning, dumb and absurdly coquettish, they are among
- the most memorable animals in modern art. Several of them, like
- Cow with the Beautiful Muzzle, 1954, also contain some of the
- most inspired and wristy drawing of Dubuffet's career, formed
- by the brush--or its handle--dragging through the thick
- paint.
- </p>
- <p> As Peter Schjeldahl points out in the catalog, Dubuffet "had
- the transgressor's secret love of limits, the outlaw's perverse
- attachment to laws," and this repeatedly shows itself in a sense
- of surface, texture and inflection that becomes extravagantly,
- almost morbidly, refined. His figures made of butterfly wings
- are exquisite; looking at some of his surfaces, particularly
- in the later collages and "Texturologies" of the 1950s, one
- finds oneself comparing them to the tarnished and mottled silver
- leaf on a Japanese screen or to richly tanned and patinated
- leather. Doubtless some of them present insoluble problems
- for the conservator--see them now, they won't be around in
- another 50 years--and yet, in a perverse way, they look like
- the work of a craftsman-artist obsessed with nuance, an art
- that is not raw at all but cooked exactly au point.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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