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Excerpt:
At its core, artistic creation is a solitary affair:
the artist is alone with their materials and their imagination.
This is reflected in many creation myths, where a god
creates the world out of solitude and loneliness. Probably
most art is created under such circumstances of isolation
and obscurity, but for obvious reasons we can never
know how much. Only the tip of this iceberg appears
in amateur art exhibitions. A great deal of such work
is not ‘original’: it pays more or less deliberate homage
to conventions that are either traditional or Modernist.
There is also the influence of what could be called
a collective visual unconscious. Almost all the innovations
of Modernism, Cubism, Surrealism, Abstraction etc have
been culturally digested and flushed into a sort of
underground sewer of forms and styles. This also includes
more popular recipes, as found, for example in comics,
logos and other forms of imagery. To dip into this reservoir
you do not have to have been to an art school: in fact
those with only a superficial acquaintance with art
are most likely to draw on it (doodling is a microcosmic
example). Nevertheless, some of this work created in
obscurity manages to come to light and has the stamp
of originality.
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The question then arises: how much of this could be
called outsider art? The term has now been around for
sixty years or more (since the foundation of the Compagnie
de l’Art Brut in 1948). During that time the whole cultural
landscape has fundamentally altered, including most
of the artistic conventions that Dubuffet attacked with
his notion of a popular, unsophisticated creativity.
In addition, his initial conditions for extreme originality,
social or psychological isolation, creative innocence
and detachment from the marketplace, for example, have
become almost impossible to maintain. Imaginary isolation
has become harder because of the contamination of TV,
the internet, iPods, mobile phones etc. Some writers
believe that solitude itself is endangered. Cultural
innocence is also harder to maintain, partly because
the category of outsider itself has become incorporated
into the mainstream. And because many outsiders are
discovered during their lifetime, they too have to cope
with the commercial world just like other artists. It
is not just that the actual survival of outsiders –
the eccentrics, the visionaries, the outcasts – is endangered:
what is also affected is our image of outsider-ness.
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