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Definition: art brut from The Macquarie Dictionary
1.

the spontaneous pictorial compositions of psychotics, children and amateur painters, sometimes considered to have formal aesthetic value.

Etymology: French : raw art


art brut

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
Term coined by the French artist Jean Dubuffet to describe various types of art produced outside the conventional art world. Literally the term means ‘raw art’, but it is sometimes translated into English as outsider art . The outsiders who practise such art include people in prison or psychiatric hospital. Dubuffet believed that the work of such people had a spontaneous power lacking in the polished work of professional artists. Dubuffet's own artistic work often used unconventional materials, and he began collecting art brut in 1945, influenced by a visit to Switzerland, where he saw pictures by patients in mental hospitals. From then on he devoted much of his time to promoting art brut through exhibitions and lectures. He made a very large collection, more than 5,000 items, and in 1972 he presented it to the city of Lausanne, Switzerland; it opened to the public in 1976. About half the work in the collection was produced by patients in psychiatric hospitals. Among the artists…
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Full text Article art brut

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
Term coined by the French artist Jean Dubuffet to describe various types of art produced outside the conventional art world. Literally the term means ‘raw art’, but it is sometimes translated into English as outsider art . The outsiders who practise such art include people in prison or psychiatric…
| 249 words
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Full text Article art brut

From Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
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Full text Article art brut

From The Macquarie Dictionary
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Full text Article Dubuffet, Jean

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
(zhäN dübüfā'), 1901–85, French painter and sculptor. Rejecting academic art training, Dubuffet divided his time during the 1920s and 30s between art and the wine business. In 1942 he turned solely to his artistic career. He created primitive, childlike, and humorous effects savagely opposed to…
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Full text Article Art Brut (French 'raw art')

From The Thames & Hudson Dictionary of Art Terms
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Full text Article Dubuffet, Jean (-Philippe-Arthur)

From Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
(born , July 31, 1901, Le Havre, Fr.—died May 12, 1985, Paris) French painter, sculptor, and printmaker. He studied painting in Paris, but in 1929 he began making a living as a wine merchant. When he returned to art full-time in the early 1940s, he became a leading artist in Paris and proponent of…
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Full text Article outsider art

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
artwork created by typically unconventional and untrained artists from the margins of society and the art world. The term was coined in 1972 by British scholar and art critic Roger Cardinal to translate art brut [Fr.,=raw, or crude, art], which Jean Dubuffet used to describe art made by inmates of…
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Full text Article graffiti art

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
Art inspired by urban graffiti. Critical and financial interest in graffiti art emerged in the 1970s in New York, with artists and critics seeing graffiti as a direct and genuine expression of urban culture, free of the manipulation of the art market. Leading graffiti artists were Jean-Michel…
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Full text Article Dubuffet, Jean

From A Dictionary of the Avant-Gardes
(31 July 1901–12 May 1985) The son of a wealthy wine merchant, Dubuffet had little serious artistic training and spent little of his early life painting before beginning a life in Paris as a rich dilettante. After World War II, he took up painting again, developing a technique in which he loaded the…
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Full text Article Dubuffet, Jean

From Chambers Biographical Dictionary
1901-85 French painter and printmaker Born in Le Havre, he enrolled at the Académie Julian in Paris in 1918, but never studied seriously, enjoying life as the son of a rich wine merchant, whose business he took over in 1925. He began painting again during World War II, when he invented the concept…
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