Jean Dubuffet (1901-1985)
Jean Dubuffet (1901-1985)

Contrepoint aux Outils

Details
Jean Dubuffet (1901-1985)
Contrepoint aux Outils
signed and dated 'J. Dubuffet 64' (lower centre)
oil on canvas
35 x 45 5/8in. (89 x 116cm.)
Painted on 29 mai 1964
Provenance
Given by the artist to the present owner in 1970
Literature
Catalogue intégral des travaux de Jean Dubuffet, fasc. XX, L'Hourloupe I, Lausanne 1966, no. 337, p. 158 (illustrated).
Exhibited
Paris, Galerie Jeanne Bucher, L'Hourloupe, December 1964, no. 13 (illustrated in the catalogue).
New York, Guggenheim Museum, Dubuffet 1962-1966, October 1966-February 1967, no. 42 (illustrated in the catalogue).
Basel, Kunsthalle, L'Hourloupe, June-August 1970, no. 23 (illustrated in the catalogue p. 10).
Amiens, Maison de la Culture, Dubuffet - Dessins, Peintures 1942-1983, March-May 1984 (illustrated in the catalogue p. 57).
Malmö, Konsthall, Jean Dubuffet, December 1984-March 1985 (illustrated in the catalogue p. 15).
Sale room notice
Please note that this work is signed, titled and dated 'Contrepoint aux outils J. Dubuffet mai 1964' (on the reverse).

Lot Essay

'...The manner ....of my Hourloupe paintings is that of an uninterrupted and resolutely uniform meandering script,(unifying all planes to the frontal plane, paying no heed to the particular space of the object described, neither in its dimensions, nor its distance nor closeness) thereby abolishing all particularities, all categories (by which I mean the usual classifications adopted by our reflexive mind which makes distinctions between one notion and another: between the notion of a 'chair' for example and that of a 'tree', that of a 'human figure', 'cloud', 'ground', landscape or anything else) so that this consistently uniform script indifferently applied to all things (and it should be emphasised, not only visible objects but also invisible inventions of our thoughts, imagination or fantasy: mixed together without discrimination) will reduce them to the lowest common denominator and restitute a continuous undifferentiated universe; it will thereby dissolve the categories which our mind habitually employs to decifer (better to say cipher) the facts and spectacles of the world. Herewith the circulation of the mind from one object to another, from one category to another will be liberated and its mobility greatly increased.' (Jean Dubuffet: Letter to Arnold Glimcher, September 15, 1969,reproduced in Jean Dubuffet:A Retrospective. exhib cat. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York,1973,p.26.)

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