Excerpt:
...At a time when it is fashionable
to be a self-taught artist, there are apparently fewer
and fewer cases of genuine ‘art brut’, which makes Marcel
Storr’s large pencil and coloured ink drawings of churches
and cities of the future all the more valuable. A collection
of fifty or so of his works were discovered in 1971
by a Parisian couple called Mr and Mrs Kempf, after
Storr’s wife introduced them to his secret world. His
drawings teem with buildings whose spires, towers, domes,
pinnacles, minarets reach up into the sky, but it is
a world strikingly devoid of thought or feeling, whose
population is reduced to ants swarming under fleecy,
ominous, weird skies.
Born in Paris on July 3rd, 1911, Storr was an abandoned
child, who was subsequently apprenticed in farms, entrusted
to nuns at an Alsatian convent, sent down the mines,
and who worked at Les Halles market, loading and unloading
lorries. In 1964, he found a job sweeping leaves in
the Bois de Boulogne and married. He had been drawing
for some time when his wife, a caretaker at a Primary
school in rue Milton, in the 9th arrondissement, took
advantage of his being away one evening to invite the
art-lovers, Mr and Mrs Kempf into her kitchen after
a parents’ meeting. From under the oilcloth on the table,
she pulled out her husband’s secret drawings, made mostly
in a large spiral copy book.