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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>