Excerpt:
...Few artists can claim to live and breathe their work
to the same extent as Raymond Isidore (1900--1964),
whose house in Chartres was also his masterpiece. Mosaics
of broken glass and crockery adorn the building, its
courtyards and interior, covering even the sewing machine
and coffee grinder. Only the white sheets in the bedroom
were left unadulterated. Yet Raymond Isidore never considered
himself to be an artist. A graveyard sweeper by day,
he devoted 30 years, 29,000 hours and 15 tons of crockery
to this project, in an effort to escape the monotony
of his everyday existence. He could probably never have
imagined that his house, La Maison Picassiette, would
attract over 30,000 visitors each year, and be the subject
of a 1998 Channel 4 TV production, called 'Journeys
into the Outside', narrated by British pop icon Jarvis
Cocker. Even Isidore's nickname conveys the happy coincidence
of unskilled misfit and artistic genius that encapsulates
the notion of outsider art. Christened 'Picassiette'
by a journalist, Isidore, as the pun implies, is both
a scavenger (pique-assiette) and a great twentieth-century
artist.
The legend began in 1928, when Raymond Isidore acquired
4 acres of fallow land for 450 francs and determined
to build a house for his wife and three stepchildren.
In the course of one year, working in the evenings and
on Sundays, he built a small home consisting simply
of a kitchen and two bedrooms. Then, in 1937, he began
to cover the outside walls of his house with mosaics
of an unusual kind. Hunting in quarries and rubbish-tips,
Picassiette collected tea-spouts, broken ashtrays and
colourful perfume bottles with which to create geometric
designs and symbolic narratives. He made mortar from
limestone and sand, which was tinted ochre and blue
with crushed cement and blue chalk, and his only tools
were a trowel, a soup-spoon, a fork and a pocket-knife.
On the front wall of the house, scenes of Jerusalem
and Chartres mingle with iconic female figures, the
exotic, sensual Palestinian and the pure and maternal
French woman. These first designs mark the beginning
of a preoccupation with religion, death, the feminine
and the exotic -- universal themes that recur in his
mosaics.