- Jean Tirilly
Jean Tirilly (born 1946) is a French painter, born in 1946 in
Léchiagat , Brittany,France . He paints in theOutsider Art tradition coined by the Britishart critic Roger Cardinal in 1974, first studied by the Germanpsychiatrist andart historian Hans Prinzhorn in the 1920s, and popularized asArt Brut by the French abstract artistJean Dubuffet in the 1950s. Tirilly's oeuvre stands among the strongest contemporary examples ofArt Brut inEurope . His deft technique and unusual sense of vision and purpose, however, stand in sharp contrast to the commonly prescribed features of Art Brut, notablyautodidacticism and dissociativism. As such, Tirilly is also a proponent of Marginal orSingular Art (in French, "L'art singulier"), an art current that eschews many of the habitual artistic qualifiers be they subject, style, method, or purpose. His work is included in the "Neuve Invention" section of the importantCollection de l'Art Brut inLausanne ,Switzerland .Early life
A
self-taught artist, Tirilly began painting in 1986 at age 40. Prior to his genesis of the late 1980s, he lived a largely piecemeal life. He trained as anavy mechanic , enlisted in the Marine Nationale, and travelled the globe for a number of years aboard the "Foch"aircraft carrier . He then resettled in France, working odd jobs inBrittany while cultivating the elaborate visions of quotidian life in coastalFinistère that had always consumed him and would later constitute his central subject. During a childhood marked by the absence oftelevision , Tirilly's exposure to the absurd and unusual emerged ironically out of his provincial milieu: travellingcircus es, drunken bouts between village mendicants, delinquent apple thieves, village idiots, and the host of passers-by and external influences that coloured Breton village life through the second half of the twentieth century.Work
While it is difficult to ascribe influences to Tirilly's work, references to formative elements can be found. The macabre and lugubrious tone of his paintings is in part attributed to the artist's esteem for the work of fifteenth century Dutch painter
Hieronymus Bosch . Tirilly's litany of contorted and tormented characters also calls to mind the late works ofFrancisco Goya , the figural works of Francis Bacon, theportrait s ofLucian Freud , and the oneiric netherworlds ofOdilon Redon , all the while maintaining characteristic differences between the influence and the influenced. His palette and swatch-like application of colour seem strongly influenced by thePont-Aven School artists, notably French compatriotsPaul Gauguin ,Paul Sérusier , andÉmile Bernard , and theArt Brut tradition out of which he paints has as much to do withJean Dubuffet as with general countercultural trends in post-World War II French art . Ultimately however, Tirilly's work defies direct influence. The derivatives are so tangential, the oeuvre of such extreme individuality that most attempts at having the paintings accord with formally accepted critical notions and forebear influences are easily quashed.Tirilly's paintings are largely autobiographical, each image capturing childhood memories, family relatives, personal hardships, or transient pleasures. Despite the apparent anguish in his work, humanizing elements such as family, friendship, and nostalgia temper bleakness with hope, suffering with redemption.
Self-portrait s are common but typically framed within the context of memory or dream. Tirilly's paintings are meticulously catalogued via a system modelled on the Aztec andMaya codices ; acodex number is assigned to each completed work and subsequent paintings follow in numerical succession. He favours board and paper overcanvas and acrylic paints over oils claiming the media are better suited to his work.Tirilly's growing body of work is unique among the present output of autodidact artists working consciously within the rough-hewn parameters of
Outsider Art . While the label is no doubt limiting, the artist's atypical ability to combine the fantastic with the banal, personal distortion with autobiography, and joy with torment is a strong example of the tripartite tension between academism, realism, and neophytism central to the traditions of Naïve, Raw, andOutsider art .Selected exhibitions
* "Galerie Benoot", Knokke-Heist, Belgium
* "Galerie Jakez", Pont-Aven, France
* "Galerie l'Aquarelle", Quimper, France
* "Galerie Zaiß", Aalen, Germany
* "SüdWestGalerie", Niederalfingen, Germany
* "Biz’Art-Biz’Art", Le Vaudioux, FranceSelected collections
* "Collection de l'Art Brut", Lausanne, Switzerland
* "Musée d’Art Spontané", Brussels, BelgiumReferences
* Danchin, Laurent et al. "Jean Tirilly: Un poète des couleurs (A Colour Poet)" [exhibition catalogue] . Geneva: La Baconnière, 2007.
External links
* [http://www.artbrut.ch/ Collection de l'Art Brut] (Lausanne, Switzerland)
* [http://www.musee-art-spontane.be/ Musée d'Art Spontané] (Brussels, Belgium)
* [http://www.jeantirilly.com/JeanTirilly.htm The Fascinating World of Jean Tirilly]
* [http://www.ceramics-design.com Jean Tirilly: Recent Works] (with additional work by Lucie Ludwiczak)
* [http://artfacts.net/index.php/pageType/artistInfo/artist/34472/lang/1 Artfacts.net]
* [http://web.artprice.com/artistdetails.aspx?idArti=NjAzMjIwNTgwMzU2ODY2LQ=&src=3 Artprice.com]
* [http://www.rawvision.com/ Raw Vision Magazine]
* [http://www.abcd-artbrut.org/english.html Art Brut Connaissance & Diffusion (ABCD)]
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