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Excerpt:
...Mario del Curto achieved the compelling intimacy
and intensity of his photographs through an involvement
with his subjects described by Michel Thevoz as 'existential
photography'. Eschewing passive voyeurism or manipulative
choreography, del Curto genuinely wanted to understand
and befriend these artists, some of whom are antisocial
and guarded; all of whom are eccentric. His interest
encouraged them to project themselves authentically
and spontaneously within the contexts that relate symbiotically
to their work. The photographer's implied presence creates
a dialogue into which we can inscribe ourselves, affording
a deeper sense of empathy and understanding of these
fascinating individuals.
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Like many Art Brut artists Stanislaw Zagajewski's home
in a small terraced house in Wloclawek, an economically
depressed city in Poland, is densely cluttered. Found
in a basket at the door of St. Barbara's church in Warsaw
in 1929 he was placed in an orphanage until the age
of 16. After drifting between jobs he came to Wloclawek
where the museum authorities helped him secure the status
of an artist, entitling him to housing and a small pension
under the ancien regime. In his stronger days he combed
work sites by night for good quality clay. Several times
a month he took his creations to a factory to be fired
by a sympathetic worker who would occasionally slip
a piece into the kiln. Although hundreds of pieces stashed
around the house have crumbled away, Zagajewski remains
philosophical -- believing that his most monumental
creation, composed of over 50 individual pieces, is
yet to be born.
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