PDF file - University of South Australia
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PDF file - University of South Australia
Margin to Centre: Visionary Art 5 July - 5 August 2011 SASA GALLERY Anthony Mannix, n.d., Untitled, watercolour on paper, 30 x 40 cm Margin to Centre: Visionary Art Curators Paul Hoban, Head, Painting Studio, Art, Architecture & Design, University of South Australia (UniSA) Prof Colin Rhodes, Head of School, Sydney College of the Arts, University of Sydney Artists Vittorio Ban, Howard Finster, Iris Frame, Anne Marie Grgich, Bronco Johnson, Albert Louden, Anthony Mannix, R.A. Miller, Frank Phelan, Jungle Phillips, José dos Santos, Gérard Sendrey, Mary T. Smith, James Son Ford Thomas and James T. Thomas. Editor Dr Mary Knights, Director, SASA Gallery, UniSA Catalogue Design Keith Giles, Curator/Manager, SASA Gallery, UniSA 1 Howard Finster, 1990, Self-portrait aged 25, acrylic & felt pen on plywood, 25 x 10 x 5 cm 2 Contents 5 Introduction 6 Who’s Afraid of Outsider Art? Colin Rhodes 18 Margin to Centre: Visionary Art Paul Hoban 25 Acknowledgements Front cover: José dos Santos, n.d. Figures (detail) wood paint, clothing, dimensions variable Back cover: Jungle Phillips, 1996, Timed Tides XXVI, (detail) acrylic on canvas, 180 x 60 cm 3 José dos Santos, n.d., Figures, (details), wood, paint and found clothing, dimensions variable 4 Introduction Margin to Centre: Visionary Art is an exhibition of work by artists who are self-taught and have developed their practices outside of mainstream art schools and galleries. Many of the artists have been marginalisation from society because of eccentricity, poverty or illness, or through institutionalisation in prisons and psychiatric hosptials. Although grouped together as ‘Outsider Art’ the work is idiosyncratic reflecting, not a style or a movement, but a range of very disparate visions. In this exhibition the curators Paul Hoban, Studio Head, Painting, AAD, UniSA, and Prof Colin Rhodes, Head, SCA, Sydney University, have repositioned this intense and exuberant body of work by artists at the fringes of the art world back into the centre. The SASA Gallery has received immense support and assistance from many people in the development of this exhibition and the associated events and catalogue. Special thanks to the curators Paul Hoban and Colin Rhodes and the artists Vittorio Ban, Howard Finster, Iris Frame, Anne Marie Grgich, Bronco Johnson, Albert Louden, Anthony Mannix, R.A. Miller, Frank Phelan, Jungle Phillips, José dos Santos, Gérard Sendrey, Mary T. Smith, James Son Ford Thomas and James T. Thomas. Also special thanks to the performers Anthony Mannix and members of The Loop Orchestra and Rudely Interrupted. To bring this project to fruition the curators, artists and performers have been assisted by many friends, family members, carers, arts professionals and organisations including Arts SA, the Helpmann Academy, the Greenaway Art Gallery, the Richard Llewellyn Arts & Disability Trust, the Muscular Dystrophy Association of South Australia, and the Disability Information and Resource Centre. Margin to Centre: Visionary Art has been developed as a partnership between the SASA Gallery and Painting Studio, AAD, UniSA; and the Sydney College of the Arts, and STOARC, University of Sydney. The SASA Gallery supports a program of exhibitions focusing on innovation, experimentation and performance. With the assistance of the Division of Education, Art and Social Sciences and the Division Research Performance Fund, the SASA Gallery is being developed as a leading contemporary art space publishing and exhibiting high-quality research based work, and as an active site of teaching and learning. The SASA Gallery showcases South Australian artists, designers, writers and curators associated with Art, Architecture & Design, UniSA in a national and international context. Dr Mary Knights Director, SASA Gallery 5 Who’s Afraid of Outsider Art? Colin Rhodes ‘A song bawled out by a girl scrubbing the stairs knocks me over much more than an erudite cantata. To each his own. I like the little. I also like the embryonic, the ill-fashioned, the imperfect, the mixed. I prefer raw diamonds, in their gangue. And with all their defects’.1 Jean Dubuffet (1945) When I was very small I used to get told off for staring at people. The truth is I was staring at everything. I still do. It’s just not so obvious now. By the time we’re not very old, most of us, though, look away more than we actually look. We stop pointing. We stop asking questions. Avoidance becomes a function of etiquette, of socialization. Previously insatiable curiosity is tempered and the sense of wonder is domesticated. Naïveté gives way to knowing. The same goes for attending to art. On the whole, we come into the gallery armed with our received opinions and learned cultural baggage. Too often exhibition visitors spend more time huddled around explanatory wall texts and peering at labels adjacent to displayed works than they do with the art itself. They are looking, of course, for context; for guidance on how to look. And they are looking for reassurance that the artists who created the work have a right to be shown in such spaces ... especially when the art is difficult. The art we’re concerned with here is, in its most important ways, no different to any other. Drawings by Gérard Sendrey and Albert Louden, sculpture by José dos Santos, paintings by 6 Jungle Phillips and Iris Frame, and prints by Kenneth Rasmussen and Anthony Mannix, for example, clearly belong to the family of visual art. Yet their work, and that of the others included here, has been fenced off, redefined, and contained in discourses of collecting and criticism that presume its essential difference to ‘mainstream’, or what Arthur Danto calls ‘artworld’ art.2 In the USA the term ‘self-taught’ has long been in use as an umbrella descriptor. In Europe in the 1940s, the French artist Jean Dubuffet even invented a new category that he called Art brut, which set the trend for a flurry of naming attempts and internal debates that at times have threatened to obscure the art itself. One of the terms that has stuck in spite of being, or because it is, contentious, is ‘Outsider Art’. Much Outsider Art reveals experience that is often radically different to that of the broader audience for the work – and especially for artworld sophisticates who form its most vocal audience. Aesthetics helps to muddy the waters here, because it is often the strange or singular look of works like those of Dos Santos or Mannix that attracts our attention in the first place. And it is not just the unusual ways in which artists deal with form, but often also their unexpected use of materials and idiosyncratic construction that draws the eye. It is also, almost inevitably, the evidence that a singularly visionary perception is at work. In sociological terms people are marginalized through difference. And in cultures which are fundamentally materialist and privilege rationality, ‘special insight’ and even naïveté, after a certain age, are not only questionable, but essentially threatening qualities. To take an obvious example: in the western nations today voice hearing is described by the Mary T. Smith, 1989, Collector (detail), enamel paint on masonite board, 80 x 62 cm 7 Gérard Sendrey, 2009, drawings (details), ink on paper, dimensions variable 8 dominant culture as hallucinatory and the individual voice hearer deemed to be ill. The voices are said to be internally generated, rather than metaphysical or supernatural in origin. Visionary, or otherwise revelatory perception is viewed with ridicule or suspicion. Yet this was not always so, and there are contemporary cultures and sub-cultures in which ‘visionary’ perception is viewed as real, revelatory, and a gift.3 There are artists – like Mannix, Louden, Grgich, Phillips and Wenzel – who seemingly have access to ‘other’ places, enjoying or enduring the experience of realities that are markedly different to the one that’s commonly acknowledged by social consensus. And because the consensus is held together as much by what is excluded as included, such people can find themselves ostracised by what I’ll call the ‘visionary’ nature of their perception. However, anyone interested in the possibility of descriptions of consciousness as more than just a by-product of mechanistic processes will be open to the possibility of seeing types of vision that are not merely practical as both legitimate and potentially insightful. Rather than categorizing, we should attend to the particularities of an artist’s vision. Imagination means different things to different people at different times. And for academically trained artists like Henry Fuseli, Caspar David Friedrich, or William Blake, for example, it was the cosmic function through which individuals might get to the very essence of things. According to Blake: ‘This world of Imagination is the world of Eternity … There Exist in that Eternal World the Permanent Realities of Every Thing which we see reflected in this Vegetable Glass of Nature [the human eye]’ (‘A Vision of the Last Judgment’, 1810). This fundamentally visionary worldview should make viewers attend to Blake’s representations as more than ‘tweakings’ of the world we all live in, and investigate their metaphysical dimension. The same is true of all of the work included in this exhibition. In ‘visionary’ works I don’t think we are ever asked, as viewers, to mistake the representation for the ‘reality’, for however realistic the artist’s intent might be, none except perhaps the most deluded would regard their works as more than representation; as interpretative, communicating vessels. The question, then, is partly about what it is that is being represented. In addition, simply by being self-taught, as are all the individuals in the exhibition, artists are less likely to reflect the prevailing ‘mainstream’ conventions their day. Add to this further hurdles, which might variously include a lack of formal education, poverty, incarceration in jail or psychiatric hospital, and trauma, and the marvel is not so much the idiosyncrasy or eccentricity of style, but the sheer inventiveness that has been brought into play to communicate so strongly in spite of everything. Outsider Art is a field that has grown, usually in fits and starts, over the last hundred years or so, giving it the appearance nowadays of a transnational and transhistorical tendency descriptor, rather than of a movement shaped by self-conscious practices and philosophies, as in the case of the various ‘isms’ of modern and postmodern art. Its scope has been defined largely by collectors, dealers, culturally inscribed professional artists (that is, not outsiders) and, occasionally, psychiatrists, all of whom were interested in creative production that lay beyond 9 even the ‘bohemian’ or ‘underground’ scenes so familiar in late modernist counterculture. Art historians and critics came late and only sporadically to the field. Curators likewise. This was largely a result of the anti-academic and anti-institutional views of many of Outsider Art’s foundational supporters and current apologists. Though it has been around loosely as a concept for almost a century, the specific term ‘outsider art’ was not used until 1972, when it was employed as the title of British writer, Roger Cardinal’s book about ‘art brut’4 – the term invented by the French painter Jean Dubuffet to describe his collection of idiosyncratic art in the 1940s. It gained wider usage in the 1980s and ‘90s, largely as a result of increased, if contentious, usage in the United States among specialist dealers and collectors wanting to distinguish the work in which they were interested from traditional ‘folk art’. In Australia, the field arrived almost readymade as Outsider Art in the 1980s, through pioneer dealers and collectors like Terence Relph and Philip Hammial, as well as artists like Mannix. The term Outsider Art has grown to embrace work produced by artists springing from a fairly broad range of socio-cultural and socio-medical groups, ranging from the stereotypical, institutionalised ‘psychotic’, to mediums, intellectually disabled people and other non-mainstream individuals. Claims are commonly made for special and different qualities in the art itself, though often all that seems to connect the ‘outsiders’ is a shared unconnectedness to dominant artworlds, or a highly idiosyncratic relationship with marginal, culturally embedded 10 traditions of image and object making.5 As a result, attempts are regularly made to dismiss the very construction of the Outsider Art category on the grounds that it further separates and undermines certain groups already marginalised by normative codes. Yet, for better or worse, as sign the concept Outsider Art separates in order to make visible that which otherwise tends to remain invisible and challenges normalising tendencies. The American commentator William Swislow argues that, ‘In the most useful version of the outsider art concept, the great insight is that art is not a monopoly of Culture, with a capital C’.6 In this sense, art produced outside the dominant artworld matrix is generally recognized, but not dependent on artworld appropriation for legitimization. Romantic ideas about artists cast them as a classless figures who inhabit a zone at the margins of society; people who belong and speak to the dominant culture, but who are still somehow set apart from it.7 Although not tenable as a literal description of the artist’s social place, it is a useful metaphor to employ when thinking about art that is created away from the system of training, production and consumption that constitutes the dominant artworld; art that doesn’t know the ‘rules’, so to speak. Furthermore, although the idea of the margin denotes an edge, I want to extend the metaphor by talking about a more vaguely defined frontier; a kind of fringe structure whose limits are illdefined and which tangle with other world-views. The French writer Louis Marin introduces the useful concept of the ‘lisière’, which he describes as ‘the space of a gap, but uncertain of its limits’; it has on one side a well-defined edge, but ‘on the other an edge fraying so as to become chaos’8 I don’t want to produce a model here of a single, monolithic culture bounded by a lisière containing ‘outsiders’, ‘the folk’, and ‘visionaries’, etc., but rather one of manifold cultures (sometimes constituted as ‘tribes of one’) whose zone of interaction is the lisière; a place where the familiar and the alien merge, where communication across boundaries becomes possible. Moreover, this zone of communicability is a neutral place; the ‘No-man’s Land’ between trenches on a World War I battlefield, where enemies can be together or, at Christmas play soccer. This is the ‘territory’ that viewers are invited to enter in this exhibition. Metaphorically speaking there are imaginative spaces that one occupies. Their existence is a sign of one’s personhood. Depending on where you’re starting from, access even to representations of these spaces is on a sliding scale from easy to impossible. Understanding is based on shared experience and being able to build empathic bridges in cases where that experience, background, and so on are not shared. As a viewer, the attempt to feel your way empathically into a work has much to recommend it. Some people occupy their world-view centrally, unable or unwilling to engage with other realities. Except in such cases of profound autism, though, most people have a more or less elastic relationship with the unfamiliar and the unknown. They can enter into creative dialogue. Viewers can, if they are prepared to stare, point, ask artless questions, and feel their way into these worlds. Vittorio Ban, 1995, Landscape with boats (detail), oil on masonite board, 110 x 135 cm Vittorio Ban, 1996, Mona Lisa (detail), oil on masonite board, 114 x 73 cm 11 Anne Marie Grgich (USA, b. 1961) began making spontaneous art at the age of fifteen, mostly by clandestinely painting in her family’s books, or making junk constructions. Essentially self-taught, she first introduced collage into her work around 1988, but took it to a higher level in 1997 during a period of illness. When she had recovered she began to produce collage paintings – images of people encountered over time in the street and in mind journeys that manifest themselves and recombine, according to her mood, in the process of creation. Recently, she has described her faces and people as ‘manifestations of conglomerated persona, in a way acting out these characters’. Works share in common a luminescence and great physicality, resulting from a creative process that typically combines collage, painting and the use of polymer resins, often thickly applied and in multiple layers. In this way, the resulting images appear simultaneously ancient and amazingly fresh and contemporary. Albert Louden (United Kingdom, b. 1943) was born in the English seaside town of Blackpool where his Londoner parents had gone to escape the Blitz. He had already been making art for two decades when he was ‘discovered’ by the art dealer Victor Musgrave in 1981. Louden’s celebrity as an artist lies primarily in large pastel drawings of people in urban environments, followed by spare landscapes, usually consisting of a single geometric dwelling. He has for a long time also been an abstractionist. Louden’s path has been unswerving through the ups and downs of anonymity, fame and fortune. He still lives in the same compact house in East London that he shared with his mother until her passing. 12 Anthony Mannix (Australia, b. 1953) is a Sydneysider who has in the last few years found a home and space to create in the Blue Mountains. He has been making art for twenty-five years, including writings, drawings, paintings, sculptures, artists’ books and sound recordings for radio. His work centres on the documentation and investigation of his own experiences of psychosis and the revelations of the unconscious. At times visionary, philosophical and documentary, his work brings into dialogue image and text in order to depict an animated, erotic unconscious landscape. Kenneth Rasmussen (Denmark, b. 1971) lives alone in a sheltered unit. The whole apartment has been transformed in to a big piece of art; a constantly changing installation. He is a collector, acquiring anything he thinks is interesting or useful, from anywhere he finds it – the beach, the forest, the street, garbage. Sometimes he collects things that he can use in his knitting, such as plastic bags, which he cuts up, or an object to create a particular shape. Along with knitting Kenneth’s favourite material is linocut. His subjects are often people, which he relates either directly or indirectly to good or bad. Copulating animals often appear. Cjørkebøncer are everywhere. This little flying creature – one-eyed, Siamese, happy, angry, three-legged – is Kenneth’s own invention. Anne Marie Grgich, 2009, Trista (detail), mixed media on paper, 68 x 118 cm 13 José dos Santos (Portugal, 1904-96) claimed that, ‘The Portuguese are the greatest sculptors in the world and I am the greatest sculptor in Portugal.’ But his gravestone has on it a photograph of him playing a guitar and describes him as fadista (fado singer). He lived with his wife in the small village of Arega, in the Leiria region of Portugal. His smallholding was extremely primitive, and for very many years he was relatively unaware of the realities of modernity, ‘living in a remote part of a remote place’. He attended mass regularly and, besides his later preoccupation with the creation of an idiosyncratic and powerful sculptural oeuvre, led an apparently unremarkable life. There was a clear visionary bent, though, to his faith. He claimed to have received the stigmata and ‘that it was God who told him what to release from the natural forms of the vine, pear, olive, and other local woods which were his main raw material.’ His sculpture, then, must be seen as much as divine revelation as anything else. Gérard Sendrey (France, b. 1928) is an artist and one-time civil servant in the Bordeaux and Bègles municipalities. Always physically and psychologically fragile, he suffered from compulsive obsessions (in particular after his father’s early and violent death) that have dogged him all his life. The experience of psychoanalysis in 1967 both alleviated his psychological suffering and triggered an irrepressible need to create. For ten years he painted alone, until in 1979 he held his first exhibition and founded the ‘Groupe Pluriel’. His goal, he argues, is to ‘visit the unknown, which is the opposite of knowledge.’ He works obsessively, every day, and in a year, can produce around 8,000 artworks! In this way, he transmutes, in his 14 words, ‘his deep anxieties into a show reflecting the absolute thirst to live.’ In 1989, a year after he retired, Sendrey and the Bègles mayor, Noël Mamère opened the Musée de la Création Franche, which continues to thrive today. Anny Servais (Belgium, 1952-2009) painted out of herself, and in translating her own hopes and desires she tapped into a rich expressive vein that communicates something of the shared, general condition of contemporary life. Without resorting to linear narrative or literary symbolism, she packed her work with a content to which audiences react intuitively as well as intellectually. Hers are very physical works, which bear witness to an intense relationship between the artist and the process of production. Surfaces are built up in paint and collage, then worked back into and over. It is easy to imagine the literal closeness of the artist to the surface on which she worked. Remarkably, the mature body of artistic expression she left behind was the result of only a decade and a half of practice. Anny Servais began her life as a visual artist only at the age of 42. Roy Wenzel (The Netherlands, b. 1959) was born in a refugee camp in the southern town of Heerlen to Indonesian parents. He suffered from severe eczema from his earliest years and was hospitalised constantly as a child because of problems associated with the condition. It was during this period that it also became apparent that he was autistic. The memory of these times has remained very strong, as revealed in repeated images of hospital wards, nurses and, in particular, the constant recurrence of a self-portrait figure with arms raised behind its head, hair standing on end, and face screwed into a silent Anthony Mannix, n.d., Afficianardos, paint & ink on paper 15 Anne Marie Grgich, The Golden Arrow, handmade artist book, mixed media, 45 x 30 x 5 cm 16 scream. Wenzel first began drawing at the age of eleven when he gained access to materials in hospital. Since that time he has drawn spontaneously almost every day. In his work Wenzel provides us with a privileged view of a world into which, because of his verbal disability, we would otherwise be denied access. Notes 1. Dubuffet, ‘Notes for the Well-Read’, M. Glimcher, Jean Dubuffet: Towards an Alternative Reality, New York, 1987, p.86. 2. A. Danto, ‘The Artworld and its Outsiders’, Museum of American Folk Art, Self-taught Artists of the 20th Century: an American anthology, San Francisco, 1998, pp. 18-27. 3. On this topic see, for example, Ivan Leudar and Philip Thomas, Voices of Reason, Voices of Insanity, London, 2000. 4. Roger Cardinal, Outsider Art, London, 1972. As recently as June this year Cardinal repeated to a conference audience in Helsinki that the phrase was not his invention, but that of his publisher, and that his book was about Art brut, which he has always considered to be a perfectly acceptable term for Anglophone audiences (compare with Art Nouveau and Art Deco, for example). 5. This is pertinent in relation to other non-hegemonic forms, such as European ‘folk art’ or traditional Aboriginal art, which are centrally inserted in recognisable cultural traditions. For this reason, they have tended to be regarded as separate from outsider art, though instances of non-normative practices arising out of these environments may well be assimilated. 6. William Swislow, ‘Catching All, Capturing Little’, Interesting Ideas, www. interestingideas.com/out/testim.htm, accessed 4 January 2011. 7. Colin Wilson’s 1956 study of authors and characters in literature who adopted critical bohemian or countercultural positions was entitled The Outsider. 8. L. Marin, ‘The frontiers of Utopia’, K. Kumar & S. Bann, eds., Utopias and the Millennium, London, 1993, p.10. José dos Santos, Staffs (detail), wood, dolls heads; mixed media, 120 x 10 x 10 cm 17 Margin to Centre: Visionary Art Paul Hoban This exhibition assembles great artworks from international collections – some being seen in Australia for the first time. It is also an opportunity to contextualise some national and local artists within this international, ‘visionary’ framework. My essay outlines our preferred terms for describing these artworks by drawing attention to several thematics, contained in each, which bring the idea of ‘visionary’ art into focus. Of the artists themselves, it is important to say that all could be classified as self-taught and outsiders. These artists have produced distinctively original work on their own terms – regardless of the usual expectations of aesthetic or art historical reference points. In this short meditation, I focus on a few of the local and international artists with whom I am most familiar, Jungle Phillips, Iris Frame, Vittorio Ban, ‘Son Ford’ Thomas and Mary T. Smith. Jungle Phillips (Australia, b. 1956) is local to Adelaide. Jungle’s house is a spectacular landmark on a busy suburban road. Inside, all available space seems to be filled with paintings, hung ‘salon’ style from floor to ceiling. Paintings and sculptural installations also adorn the exterior –walls, yard and fences – tempting passers-by to stop and engage with Jungle’s world. Jungle is irrepressible, incredibly prolific and possesses a wonderful sense of colour and composition – and it’s purely intuitive. The work is formally inventive and as far as I can see, is not influenced by any other artist or style. Jungle is unique – as his business card states: ‘Australia’s most original creative 18 artist’. The paintings typically depict Jungle’s own narratives and characters, sometimes incorporating his own take on Australiana, for example, his Ned Kelly series. The productions are compulsive and relentless. Jungle has his demons – he has had a hard life, but the work transcends all adversity with optimism and joy.1 Vittorio Ban (Yugoslavia,1935-2002) was born in Tzara, migrating to Australia with his mother as a post war refugee. As a young man he was diagnosed with schizophrenia and spent many years in institutional confinement at Glenside Mental Hospital in Adelaide and subsequently in community residential care in Port Adelaide. Vittorio was obsessed with his European heritage, creating portraits, still life paintings, landscapes and cityscapes – while making these traditional genres other-worldly, alien and strange. Vittorio’s images were mostly derived from childhood memories and imagination. Only his portraits of film stars sourced images from popular culture. He never worked directly from a printed image – subjects would have to be committed to memory before the painting process began. His favourite theme was the female portrait – his ‘Madonnas’ (Gina Lollobrigida, Sophia Loren, Marilyn Monroe, etc.). The Mona Lisa paintings were his most consistent works, always repeated with slight variations. On one occasion I showed him a reproduction of da Vinci’s Mona Lisa. Vittorio silently and seriously considered the image for several minutes, before declaring, “The nose is too big.” Iris Frame (Australia, 1915-2003). Mrs. Iris Frame was born and lived all her life in rural South Australia. It’s not clear when Iris began writing stories and making art. However, some Anne Marie Grgich, 2003, Rooster Book, hand-made book, mixed media, 19 Iris Frame, n.d., paintings (details), sizes variable 20 of the earliest surviving paintings are traceable to the 1950’s. For most of her artistic life Iris created in relative cultural and geographic isolation. She painted straight from the tube, without any colour mixing, directly onto Masonite boards and occasional flat sheets of tin. Her paintings typically carried text. She invented and reinvented ‘bush’ narratives, making her paintings to illustrate them. The paintings often elaborate fragments of Australian folk tales in an eccentric but lyrical, primitive style referring to the landscape, local places and news or events from her roots in Penola and the Murraylands. At her exhibition opening in the late 1990s, Iris delighted the audience with a performance in which she drew with both hands simultaneously! It seemed to me that this ambidextrous action was a contradiction of the notion of the natural/unnatural hand. At the time the performance was read as humorous, but in retrospect, a decentring of the normal expectation of a singular authoritative focus now seems a complex and curiously subversive gesture.2 James (Son Ford) Thomas (USA, 1926-1996). In 1982, I saw clay sculptures by James (Son Ford) Thomas at the Southern Black Folk Art (SBFA) exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum, NY. Eight years after this inspirational show, I undertook a pilgrimage to Southern USA to find, and meet some of those artists, including Son Thomas. He lived in a humble, two-roomed weatherboard house on the outskirts of Leland, Mississippi. Son Thomas was better known in those parts as a bluesman than as a visual artist, having performed with the likes of Sonny Boy Williamson and Albert King at the Greenwood Blues festival. He told me that as a boy he had seen Robert Johnson play. Son Ford’s clay skulls were unfired (he called it ‘Mississippi mud’), unpainted, and had real teeth. When I inquired where these came from he said, “I used to be a gravedigger.” He liked to shock, but embedded in this mischief was also an anti-aesthetic deliberately undermining conventional sensibility. Explaining his penchant for producing skulls he would offer this, “Skulls don’t have to be beautiful - the uglier the better”. It seems to me that on one level this statement is self deprecating, and on another it works as a subtle cultural critique of a classical aesthetic value. Mary T. Smith (USA, 1904-1995). During this crisscrossing adventure into the heart of southern US folk art, I stumbled across the extraordinary work of visionary artist Mary T. Smith. Mary T. lived just off the famous Highway 61 on the outskirts of Hazelhurst - an agricultural village in Mississippi cotton country.3 Mary T. was a contemporary of the legendary bluesman Robert Johnson (1911-1938) – also born in Hazelhurst. She started painting late in life. Her paintings were often self-portraits or of family, friends, visitors, and her beloved dogs. Originally, the paintings ornamented the ramshackle fence – a constantly changing garden gallery – comprising pseudo script, semi-legible slogans, and incredible child-like imagery. Radical, figurative distortion blended with gestural mark-making. Big, bold brush strokes, and wild colours. I’d ever seen anything quite like it. Mary T’s work continues to challenge conventional ideas about skill and representation while transmitting complex cultural references to voodoo, African heritage and syncretized Christian iconography. However she was not self-consciously making these references. 21 Aware of their enculturation and aesthetic values, some so-called mainstream artists affirm traditional or predetermined values. Some, in the spirit of avant-garde practices, choose to self-consciously challenge the validity of certain presumptions. It’s a tough call from within to see invisible wavelengths, much less to articulate them without the benefit of contrast from outside. The artist Brion Gysin once observed that “anyone who manages to step out from his (sic) own culture into another can stand there looking back at his own under another light.”4 However, it is very difficult for mainstream art to achieve this stance without distance from itself. That’s why the work presented here is called ‘visionary’ art. Visionary, because these artists manage to achieve something new – shaking our expectations with exuberant, effortless otherness. The effect is to provoke reassessment of fundamental presumptions – skill, history, context, motivation, communication, originality – in the viewer. Even the relationship between the artist and audience is challengeable, when the work is produced with indifference to artistic, cultural or institutional values. Maybe that’s liberation. 22 Notes 1. See Colin Rhodes, ‘From the House of Spirits,’ Jungle Phillips, Richard Llewellyn Trust/ArtsSA Catalogue, Adelaide, Eagle Press, 2010. 2. Paul Greenaway (OAM) personal correspondence to Paul Hoban, June 21 2011 re: Mrs. Frame’s painting techniques. Biographical information supplied by Daniel Thomas (AM). Iris Frame Performance and Exhibition, Greenaway Art Gallery, circa 1997-8. 3. For biographical notes on the artist Mary T. Smith, see William Arnett ‘Her Name is Someone’, Raw Vision 31, Summer 2000, pp. 24-31. 4. Brion Gysin, Here To Go: Planet R-101, London, Quartet Books, 1982, p. 272. Gysin was speaking as a North American expatriate, after being resident in Morocco for more than twenty years. Albert Louden, drawings (details), pastel & charcoal on paper, each 65 x 50 cm 23 James Son Ford Thomas, 1998, Skull, unfired clay, aluminium foil, human teeth, 18 x 14 x 17 cm 24 Acknowledgements The SASA Gallery supports a program of exhibitions focusing on innovation, experimentation and performance. With the support of the Division of Education, Art and Social Sciences and the Division Research Performance Fund, the SASA Gallery is being developed as a leading contemporary art space and as an active site of teaching and learning. The SASA Gallery showcases South Australian artists, designers, architects, writers and curators associated with the School of Art, Architecture and Design, University of South Australia in a national and international context. The Director, SASA Gallery, would like to acknowledge the contribution to the development of the 2011 exhibition program by the SASA Gallery Programming Committee and AAD Events and Exhibition Committee; Professor Kay Lawrence; Professor Mads Gaardboe, Head, AAD; Prof Margaret Peters, Dean: Research and Research Education, DIVEASS; and Professor Pal Ahluwalia, Pro-Vice Chancellor, DIVEASS, UniSA. Thanks to Tony and Connie Perrini for the on-going support of the SASA Gallery program by Perrini Estate. Thanks to the curators, artists and performers for their generous participation in this exhibition, catalogue and associated events - and thanks also to their friends, families, carers and supporters who assisted in making this happen. Special thanks to Arts SA, the Helpmann Academy, the Richard Llewellyn Arts & Disability Trust, the University of Sydney, the Muscular Dystrophy Association of South Australia and the Disability Information and Resource Centre. Without the support of these organisations this project would not have happened. The Director and curators would like to thank Peter Fay without which it would have been impossible to bring the work of Dos Santos to Australia; Phil Hammial for his continuous support; Creahm, Belgium for their dedication to the late Anny Servais; Andrew Bunney, Paul Greenaway and Kirsty Hammet for generously lending work from their collections; staff at the University of South Australia and Sydney University for their tireless work towards this exhibition especially: Keith Giles, Peter Harris, Amanda Muscat, Nerida Olson and Julian Tremayne. Proudly supported by the Richard Llewellyn Arts & Disabilility Trust Curators: Paul Hoban and Colin Rhodes Artists: Vittorio Ban, Howard Finister, Iris Frame, Anne Marie Grgich, Bronco Johnson, Albert Louden, Anthony Mannix, R.A. Miller, Frank Phelan, Jungle Phillips, José dos Santos, Gérard Sendrey, Mary T. Smith, James Son Ford Thomas and James T. Thomas. Performers: Anthony Mannix and The Loop Orchestra; and Rudely Interrupted. External Scholar: Professor Colin Rhodes, Head, Sydney College of the Arts, University of Sydney Editor: Dr Mary Knights Catalogue design: Keith Giles Catalogue project management: Dr Mary Knights and Keith Giles SASA Gallery staff: Dr Mary Knights, Director, SASA Gallery, AAD, UniSA Keith Giles, Gallery Curator/Manager, AAD, UniSA Julian Tremayne, Installation Consultant, AAD, UniSA Peter Harris, Technical Officer, Kaurna Building, AAD, UniSA Chris Boha, Dr Sue Kneebone, and Tom Squires, Research/Education Officers Sundari Carmody and Madeline Reece, Research/Education Interns SASA Gallery Kaurna Building, City West Campus, UniSA Cnr Fenn Place & Hindley Street, Adelaide Published by the SASA Gallery University of South Australia GPO Box 2471, Adelaide SA 5001 July 2011 ISBN 978-0-9871008-2-5 Printed by Finsbury Green © curators, artists and SASA Gallery SASA GALLERY 25