Available Formats
Jean Dubuffet, Bricoleur: Portraits, Pastiche, Performativity
By (Author) Stephanie Chadwick
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
10th February 2022
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
History of art
Portraits and self-portraiture in art
709.2
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
688g
One of the most prolific and influential artists of the 20th century, Jean Dubuffet has featured in a multitude of exhibitions and catalogues. Yet he remains one of the most misunderstoodand least interrogatedpostwar French artists. Celebrating Art Brut (the art of ostensible outsiders) while posing as an outsider himself, Dubuffet mingled with many great artists, writers, and theorists, developing an elaborate and nuanced stream of conceptual resources to reconfigure painting and reframe postwar anticultural discourses. This book reexamines Dubuffets art through the lens of these portraits (a veritable whos who of the Parisian art and intellectual scene) in tandem with his writings and the art and writings of his Surrealist sitters. Investigating Dubuffets painting as bricolage, this book reveals his reliance upon an anticulture culture and the appropriation of motifs from Surrealism to the South Pacific to explore the themes of multivalence, performativity, and multifaceted identity in his portraits.
This groundbreaking study forms a necessary and timely reevaluation of Jean Dubuffet's forays into the genre of portraiture, in which Chadwick deftly employs the concepts of bricolage, pastiche, and performativity to shed new light on Dubuffet's important relationships with leading cultural figures of his time, including Michel Tapi, Jean Paulhan, Antonin Artaud, and Henri Michaux. * Kent Minturn, Core Lecturer for Art Humanities, Columbia University, USA *
With this new volume, Chadwick offers fresh interpretations of Dubuffets mark-making, especially connecting his radical practice to Surrealist ideas in deeply intertextual readings. By focusing on a tightly constructed group of works, Chadwick expands previous understandings of Dubuffets portraits in the rich context of post-war French intellectual thought. * Sandra Zalman, author of Consuming Surrealism in American Culture: Dissident Modernism (2015) *
Stephanie Chadwick is Associate Professor of Art History at Lamar University, USA.