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Excerpt:
...Mose Tolliver b.1919
Inspired to begin painting in the 1960s after a work-related
accident left him without the use of his legs, Mose
Tolliver has become one of the most popular self-taught
painters of our time. Painting in his bedroom with simple
brushes and common house paint, he has developed a dynamic
visual lexicon, replete with quasi-abstract figures,
both familiar and imaginary. With his inventive sense
of flattened, decorative form and composition, he has
truly reinvented the still life, but he is also a master
of whimsical erotica. Today, his atelier includes members
of his extended family; his daughter Annie has also
received recognition for her paintings, which echo her
father’s exquisitely quirky style.
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Armand Gaultier b.1923
Armand Gaultier did not begin transforming trees into
his trademark ‘smiley faces’ until he was fifty years
old. The Vermont dairy farmer and handyman known as
‘Frenchie’ (a reference of his French-Canadian descent),
claims that the idea to carve giant and often grotesque
faces from the trunks of living trees ‘just kind of
struck me.’ The expressive power of these works is dramatically
amplified when considered in the context of their natural
setting, and gives a face to the palpable, yet otherwise
abstract animism that pervades the woods near his home.
This self-taught artist proves that aesthetically interfacing
with the natural world is not the exclusive province
of mainstream conceptualists.
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