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Naïve art

Naïve art is usually defined as visual art that is created by a person who lacks the formal education and training that a professional artist undergoes (in anatomy, art history, technique, perspective, ways of seeing).[1] When this aesthetic is emulated by a trained artist, the result is sometimes called primitivism, pseudo-naïve art,[2] or faux naïve art.[3]

Henri Rousseau's The Repast of the Lion (circa 1907), is an example of naïve art.

Unlike folk art, naïve art does not necessarily derive from a distinct popular cultural context or tradition;[1] indeed, at least in the advanced economies and since the Printing Revolution, awareness of the local fine art tradition has been inescapable, as it diffused through popular prints and other media. Naïve artists are aware of "fine art" conventions such as graphical perspective and compositional conventions, but are unable to fully use them, or choose not to. By contrast, outsider art (art brut) denotes works from a similar context but which have only minimal contact with the mainstream art world.

Naïve art is recognized, and often imitated, for its childlike simplicity and frankness.[4] Paintings of this kind typically have a flat rendering style with a rudimentary expression of perspective.[5] One particularly influential painter of "naïve art" was Henri Rousseau (1844–1910), a French Post-Impressionist who was discovered by Pablo Picasso.

The definition of the term, and its "borders" with neighbouring terms such as folk art and outsider art, has been a matter of some controversy. Naïve art is a term usually used for the forms of fine art, such as paintings and sculptures, but made by a self-taught artist, while objects with a practical use come under folk art. But this distinction has been disputed.[6] Another term that may be used, especially of paintings and architecture, is "provincial", essentially used for work by artists who had received some conventional training, but whose work unintentionally falls short of metropolitan or court standards.

Characteristics

 
Alfred Wallis, 1942, before Noah's Ark

Naïve art[7] is often seen as outsider art that is by someone without formal (or little) training or degree. While this was true before the twentieth century, there are now academies for naïve art. Naïve art is now a fully recognized art genre, represented in art galleries worldwide.

The characteristics of naïve art have an awkward relationship to the formal qualities of painting, especially not respecting the three rules of the perspective (such as defined by the Progressive Painters of the Renaissance):

  1. Decrease of the size of objects proportionally with distance,
  2. Muting of colors with distance,
  3. Decrease of the precision of details with distance,

The results are:

  1. Effects of perspective geometrically erroneous (awkward aspect of the works, children's drawings look, or medieval painting look, but the comparison stops there)
  2. Strong use of pattern, unrefined color on all the plans of the composition, without enfeeblement in the background,
  3. An equal accuracy brought to details, including those of the background which should be shaded off.

Simplicity rather than subtlety are all supposed markers of naïve art. It has, however, become such a popular and recognizable style that many examples could be called pseudo-naïve.

Whereas naïve art ideally describes the work of an artist who did not receive formal education in an art school or academy, for example Henri Rousseau or Alfred Wallis, 'pseudo naïve' or 'faux naïve' art describes the work of an artist working in a more imitative or self-conscious mode and whose work can be seen as more imitative than original.

Strict naïvety is unlikely to be found in contemporary artists, given the expansion of Autodidactism as a form of education in modern times. Naïve categorizations are not always welcome by living artists,[8][9] but this is likely to change as dignifying signals are known. Museums devoted to naïve art now exist in Kecskemét, Hungary; Kovačica, Serbia; Riga, Latvia; Jaen, Spain; Rio de Janeiro, Brasil; Vicq France and Paris. Examples of English-speaking living artists who acknowledge their naïve style are: Gary Bunt,[10] Lyle Carbajal,[11] Gabe Langholtz,[12] Gigi Mills,[13] Barbara Olsen,[14] Paine Proffitt,[15] and Alain Thomas.[16]

"Primitive art" is another term often applied to art by those without formal training, but is historically more often applied to work from certain cultures that have been judged socially or technologically "primitive" by Western academia, such as Native American, subsaharan African or Pacific Island art (see Tribal art). This is distinguished from the self-conscious, "primitive" inspired movement primitivism. Another term related to (but not completely synonymous with) naïve art is folk art.

There also exist the terms "naïvism" and "primitivism" which are usually applied to professional painters working in the style of naïve art (like Paul Gauguin, Mikhail Larionov, and Paul Klee).[17]

Term

In 1870, in his poem Au Cabaret-Vert, 5 heures du soir, Arthur Rimbaud uses the word naïf to designate “clumsy” pictorial representations: “I contemplated the very naive subjects of the tapestry”, which is perhaps the case of the origin of the naïf employment by Guillaume Apollinaire some time later.

Movements

Nobody knows exactly when the first naive artists appeared on the scene, as from the very first manifestations of art right up to the days of the "Modern Classic", naive artists quite unconsciously bequeathed us unmistakable signs of their creative activity. At all events, naive art can be regarded as having occupied an "official" position in the annals of twentieth-century art since – at the very latest – the publication of the Der Blaue Reiter, an almanac in 1912. Wassily Kandinsky and Franz Marc, who brought out the almanac, presented 6 reproductions of paintings by le Douanier' Rousseau (Henri Rousseau), comparing them with other pictorial examples. However, most experts agree that the year that naive art was "discovered" was 1885, when the painter Paul Signac became aware of the talents of Henri Rousseau and set about organizing exhibitions of his work in a number of prestigious galleries.[18]

The Sacred Heart painters

German art collector and critic Wilhelm Uhde is known as the principal organiser of the first Naïve Art exhibition, which took place in Paris in 1928. The participants were Henri Rousseau, André Bauchant, Camille Bombois, Séraphine Louis and Louis Vivin, known collectively as the Sacred Heart painters.

Hlebine School

A term applied to Croatian naive painters working in or around the village of Hlebine, near the Hungarian border, from about 1930. At this time, according to the World Encyclopedia of Naive Art (1984), the village amounted to little more than 'a few muddy winding streets and one-storey houses', but it produced such a remarkable crop of artists that it became virtually synonymous with Yugoslav naive painting.[19]

Hlebine is a small picturesque municipality in the North of Croatia that in 1920s became a setting against which a group of self-taught peasants began to develop a unique and somewhat revolutionary style of painting. This was instigated by leading intellectuals of the time such as the poet Antun Gustav Matoš and the biggest name in Croatian literature, Miroslav Krleža, who called for an individual national artistic style that would be independent from Western influences. These ideas were picked up by a celebrated artist from Hlebine – Krsto Hegedušić and he went on to found the Hlebine School of Art in 1930 in search of national “rural artistic expression”.[20]

Ivan Generalić was the first master of the Hlebine School, and the first to develop a distinctive personal style, achieving a high standard in his art.[21]

After the Second World War, the next generation of Hlebine painters tended to focus more on stylized depictions of country life taken from imagination. Generalić continued to be the dominant figure, and encouraged younger artists, including his son Josip Generalić.

The Hlebine school became a worldwide phenomenon with the 1952 Venice Biennale and exhibitions in Brazil and Brussels.[22]

Some of the best known naive artists are Dragan Gaži, Ivan Generalić, Maria Prymachenko, Josip Generalić, Krsto Hegedušić, Mijo Kovačić, Ivan Lacković-Croata, Franjo Mraz, Ivan Večenaj and Mirko Virius.

Artists

See: List of Naïve art artists

Museums and galleries

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Benedetti, Joan M. (19 April 2008). "Folk Art Terminology Revisited: Why It (Still) Matters". In Roberto, K. R. (ed.). Radical Cataloging: Essays at the Front. McFarland. p. 113. ISBN 978-1-4766-0512-8.
  2. ^ Risatti, Howard (15 September 2009). "Aesthetics and the Function/Nonfunction Dichotomy". A Theory of Craft: Function and Aesthetic Expression. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. p. 223. ISBN 978-0-8078-8907-7. OCLC 793525283.
  3. ^ Levy, Silvano (2008). Lines of Thought: The Drawings of Desmond Morris. Kettlestone: Kettlestone Press. p. 138. ISBN 978-0-9560153-0-3. OCLC 377804527.
  4. ^ Walker, John Albert (26 April 1992). Glossary of Art, Architecture, and Design Since 1945. London: Library Association Publishing. p. 433. ISBN 978-0-85365-639-5. OCLC 26202538.
  5. ^ Matulka, Denise I. (2008). "Anatomy of a Picture Book: Picture, Space, Design, Medium, and Style § Naïve Art". A Picture Book Primer: Understanding and Using Picture Books. Westport: Libraries Unlimited. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-59158-441-4. OCLC 225846825.
  6. ^ Wertkin, Gerard C. (2004). "Introduction". In Wertkin, Gerald C. Encyclopedia of American Folk Art. New York, London: Routledge. pp. xxxiv–xxxvi.
  7. ^ Nathalia Brodskaïa L'Art naïf éd. Parkstone International ISBN 9781859956687
  8. ^ Geller, Amy. (PDF). amygellerillustration.com/. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 4, 2012. Retrieved July 12, 2016.
  9. ^ [translation, [text] Natalia Brodskaia; Darton], adaptation Mike (2000). Naïve art. New York: Parkstone Press. p. 74. ISBN 1859953352.
  10. ^ "Gary Bunt, English Village Life". www.artistsandart.org. Retrieved July 12, 2016.
  11. ^ "Lyle Carbajal: Painting". www.notey.com. Retrieved July 12, 2016.
  12. ^ . www.saatchiart.com. Archived from the original on September 21, 2016. Retrieved July 12, 2016.
  13. ^ "Gigi Mills". www.askart.com. Retrieved July 12, 2016.
  14. ^ "Biography Barbara Olsen". www.barbaraolsen.com. Retrieved July 12, 2016.
  15. ^ "All Work: Paine Proffitt". www.acframinggallery.co.uk. Retrieved July 12, 2016.
  16. ^ "Alain THOMAS, an artist in the Garden of Eden". www.alain-thomas.com. Retrieved July 12, 2016.
  17. ^ Irina Arnoldova. Painter Sergey Zagraevsky: the view of an art critic
  18. ^ "WetCanvas: Articles: Jan and Adrie Martens: An Introduction to Naive Art". www.wetcanvas.com. Retrieved 2016-03-17.
  19. ^ "Hlebine School – oi". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  20. ^ "Hlebine School of Art: More than peasant doodles". MoonProject. Retrieved 2016-03-17.
  21. ^ Otvorena.hr, Otvorena mreza -. . www.hmnu.org. Archived from the original on 2013-09-27. Retrieved 2016-03-17.
  22. ^ DK Eyewitness Travel Guide: Croatia. Penguin. 2015-04-07. ISBN 9781465441737.

Further reading

  • Walker, John. . Glossary of Art, Architecture & Design since 1945, 3rd. ed. (archived link, April 11, 2012)
  • Bihalji-Merin, Oto (1959). Modern Primitives: Masters of Naive Painting. trans. Norbert Guterman. New York: Harry N. Abrams.
  • Fine, Gary Alan (2004). Everyday genius: self-taught art and the culture of authenticity. Chicago, IL: University Of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-24950-6.

naïve, album, naïve, album, usually, defined, visual, that, created, person, lacks, formal, education, training, that, professional, artist, undergoes, anatomy, history, technique, perspective, ways, seeing, when, this, aesthetic, emulated, trained, artist, re. For the album see Naive Art album Naive art is usually defined as visual art that is created by a person who lacks the formal education and training that a professional artist undergoes in anatomy art history technique perspective ways of seeing 1 When this aesthetic is emulated by a trained artist the result is sometimes called primitivism pseudo naive art 2 or faux naive art 3 Henri Rousseau s The Repast of the Lion circa 1907 is an example of naive art Unlike folk art naive art does not necessarily derive from a distinct popular cultural context or tradition 1 indeed at least in the advanced economies and since the Printing Revolution awareness of the local fine art tradition has been inescapable as it diffused through popular prints and other media Naive artists are aware of fine art conventions such as graphical perspective and compositional conventions but are unable to fully use them or choose not to By contrast outsider art art brut denotes works from a similar context but which have only minimal contact with the mainstream art world Naive art is recognized and often imitated for its childlike simplicity and frankness 4 Paintings of this kind typically have a flat rendering style with a rudimentary expression of perspective 5 One particularly influential painter of naive art was Henri Rousseau 1844 1910 a French Post Impressionist who was discovered by Pablo Picasso The definition of the term and its borders with neighbouring terms such as folk art and outsider art has been a matter of some controversy Naive art is a term usually used for the forms of fine art such as paintings and sculptures but made by a self taught artist while objects with a practical use come under folk art But this distinction has been disputed 6 Another term that may be used especially of paintings and architecture is provincial essentially used for work by artists who had received some conventional training but whose work unintentionally falls short of metropolitan or court standards Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Term 3 Movements 3 1 The Sacred Heart painters 3 2 Hlebine School 4 Artists 5 Museums and galleries 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingCharacteristics Edit Alfred Wallis 1942 before Noah s Ark Naive art 7 is often seen as outsider art that is by someone without formal or little training or degree While this was true before the twentieth century there are now academies for naive art Naive art is now a fully recognized art genre represented in art galleries worldwide The characteristics of naive art have an awkward relationship to the formal qualities of painting especially not respecting the three rules of the perspective such as defined by the Progressive Painters of the Renaissance Decrease of the size of objects proportionally with distance Muting of colors with distance Decrease of the precision of details with distance The results are Effects of perspective geometrically erroneous awkward aspect of the works children s drawings look or medieval painting look but the comparison stops there Strong use of pattern unrefined color on all the plans of the composition without enfeeblement in the background An equal accuracy brought to details including those of the background which should be shaded off Simplicity rather than subtlety are all supposed markers of naive art It has however become such a popular and recognizable style that many examples could be called pseudo naive Whereas naive art ideally describes the work of an artist who did not receive formal education in an art school or academy for example Henri Rousseau or Alfred Wallis pseudo naive or faux naive art describes the work of an artist working in a more imitative or self conscious mode and whose work can be seen as more imitative than original Strict naivety is unlikely to be found in contemporary artists given the expansion of Autodidactism as a form of education in modern times Naive categorizations are not always welcome by living artists 8 9 but this is likely to change as dignifying signals are known Museums devoted to naive art now exist in Kecskemet Hungary Kovacica Serbia Riga Latvia Jaen Spain Rio de Janeiro Brasil Vicq France and Paris Examples of English speaking living artists who acknowledge their naive style are Gary Bunt 10 Lyle Carbajal 11 Gabe Langholtz 12 Gigi Mills 13 Barbara Olsen 14 Paine Proffitt 15 and Alain Thomas 16 Primitive art is another term often applied to art by those without formal training but is historically more often applied to work from certain cultures that have been judged socially or technologically primitive by Western academia such as Native American subsaharan African or Pacific Island art see Tribal art This is distinguished from the self conscious primitive inspired movement primitivism Another term related to but not completely synonymous with naive art is folk art There also exist the terms naivism and primitivism which are usually applied to professional painters working in the style of naive art like Paul Gauguin Mikhail Larionov and Paul Klee 17 Term EditIn 1870 in his poem Au Cabaret Vert 5 heures du soir Arthur Rimbaud uses the word naif to designate clumsy pictorial representations I contemplated the very naive subjects of the tapestry which is perhaps the case of the origin of the naif employment by Guillaume Apollinaire some time later Movements EditNobody knows exactly when the first naive artists appeared on the scene as from the very first manifestations of art right up to the days of the Modern Classic naive artists quite unconsciously bequeathed us unmistakable signs of their creative activity At all events naive art can be regarded as having occupied an official position in the annals of twentieth century art since at the very latest the publication of the Der Blaue Reiter an almanac in 1912 Wassily Kandinsky and Franz Marc who brought out the almanac presented 6 reproductions of paintings by le Douanier Rousseau Henri Rousseau comparing them with other pictorial examples However most experts agree that the year that naive art was discovered was 1885 when the painter Paul Signac became aware of the talents of Henri Rousseau and set about organizing exhibitions of his work in a number of prestigious galleries 18 The Sacred Heart painters Edit German art collector and critic Wilhelm Uhde is known as the principal organiser of the first Naive Art exhibition which took place in Paris in 1928 The participants were Henri Rousseau Andre Bauchant Camille Bombois Seraphine Louis and Louis Vivin known collectively as the Sacred Heart painters Hlebine School Edit A term applied to Croatian naive painters working in or around the village of Hlebine near the Hungarian border from about 1930 At this time according to the World Encyclopedia of Naive Art 1984 the village amounted to little more than a few muddy winding streets and one storey houses but it produced such a remarkable crop of artists that it became virtually synonymous with Yugoslav naive painting 19 Hlebine is a small picturesque municipality in the North of Croatia that in 1920s became a setting against which a group of self taught peasants began to develop a unique and somewhat revolutionary style of painting This was instigated by leading intellectuals of the time such as the poet Antun Gustav Matos and the biggest name in Croatian literature Miroslav Krleza who called for an individual national artistic style that would be independent from Western influences These ideas were picked up by a celebrated artist from Hlebine Krsto Hegedusic and he went on to found the Hlebine School of Art in 1930 in search of national rural artistic expression 20 Ivan Generalic was the first master of the Hlebine School and the first to develop a distinctive personal style achieving a high standard in his art 21 After the Second World War the next generation of Hlebine painters tended to focus more on stylized depictions of country life taken from imagination Generalic continued to be the dominant figure and encouraged younger artists including his son Josip Generalic The Hlebine school became a worldwide phenomenon with the 1952 Venice Biennale and exhibitions in Brazil and Brussels 22 Some of the best known naive artists are Dragan Gazi Ivan Generalic Maria Prymachenko Josip Generalic Krsto Hegedusic Mijo Kovacic Ivan Lackovic Croata Franjo Mraz Ivan Vecenaj and Mirko Virius Artists EditSee List of Naive art artistsMuseums and galleries EditCroatian Museum of Naive Art Zagreb Croatia Musee international d Art naif Anatole Jakovsky Nice France Musee d Art Naif Max Fourny Paris France International Museum of Naive Art Vicq France Museum of Bad Art Massachusetts National Folk Decorative Art Museum Kyiv UkraineSee also EditAutodidacticism Anatole Jakovsky Chicago Imagists Neo primitivism Outsider art PrimitivismReferences Edit a b Benedetti Joan M 19 April 2008 Folk Art Terminology Revisited Why It Still Matters In Roberto K R ed Radical Cataloging Essays at the Front McFarland p 113 ISBN 978 1 4766 0512 8 Risatti Howard 15 September 2009 Aesthetics and the Function Nonfunction Dichotomy A Theory of Craft Function and Aesthetic Expression Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press p 223 ISBN 978 0 8078 8907 7 OCLC 793525283 Levy Silvano 2008 Lines of Thought The Drawings of Desmond Morris Kettlestone Kettlestone Press p 138 ISBN 978 0 9560153 0 3 OCLC 377804527 Walker John Albert 26 April 1992 Glossary of Art Architecture and Design Since 1945 London Library Association Publishing p 433 ISBN 978 0 85365 639 5 OCLC 26202538 Matulka Denise I 2008 Anatomy of a Picture Book Picture Space Design Medium and Style Naive Art A Picture Book Primer Understanding and Using Picture Books Westport Libraries Unlimited p 80 ISBN 978 1 59158 441 4 OCLC 225846825 Wertkin Gerard C 2004 Introduction In Wertkin Gerald C Encyclopedia of American Folk Art New York London Routledge pp xxxiv xxxvi Nathalia Brodskaia L Art naif ed Parkstone International ISBN 9781859956687 Geller Amy Lure of the Naive PDF amygellerillustration com Archived from the original PDF on September 4 2012 Retrieved July 12 2016 translation text Natalia Brodskaia Darton adaptation Mike 2000 Naive art New York Parkstone Press p 74 ISBN 1859953352 Gary Bunt English Village Life www artistsandart org Retrieved July 12 2016 Lyle Carbajal Painting www notey com Retrieved July 12 2016 Gabe Langholtz Naive Modern www saatchiart com Archived from the original on September 21 2016 Retrieved July 12 2016 Gigi Mills www askart com Retrieved July 12 2016 Biography Barbara Olsen www barbaraolsen com Retrieved July 12 2016 All Work Paine Proffitt www acframinggallery co uk Retrieved July 12 2016 Alain THOMAS an artist in the Garden of Eden www alain thomas com Retrieved July 12 2016 Irina Arnoldova Painter Sergey Zagraevsky the view of an art critic WetCanvas Articles Jan and Adrie Martens An Introduction to Naive Art www wetcanvas com Retrieved 2016 03 17 Hlebine School oi a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Hlebine School of Art More than peasant doodles MoonProject Retrieved 2016 03 17 Otvorena hr Otvorena mreza The Croatian Museum of Naive Art Guide to the Permanent Display www hmnu org Archived from the original on 2013 09 27 Retrieved 2016 03 17 DK Eyewitness Travel Guide Croatia Penguin 2015 04 07 ISBN 9781465441737 Further reading Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Naive art Walker John Naive Art Glossary of Art Architecture amp Design since 1945 3rd ed archived link April 11 2012 Bihalji Merin Oto 1959 Modern Primitives Masters of Naive Painting trans Norbert Guterman New York Harry N Abrams Fine Gary Alan 2004 Everyday genius self taught art and the culture of authenticity Chicago IL University Of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 24950 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Naive art amp oldid 1153164507, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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