Home
Blog
Artwork
Sales FAQ
Events
Associates
Leave Comment
Contact Me

Updates

2010-01-15


 

You don't want to get mixed up with a guy like me. I'm a loner, Dottie. A rebel.


Welcome to My World...

"Inner Art"

Even before the Modern Art revolution of the late nineteenth century, man had long used art as a means beyond simply photorealistic depiction of the physical world. Cultures throughout history and the globe have long valued the arts as a medium of self-expression; for creating a physical or sensory object representative of that which could not otherwise be articulated.

The contemporary form of this artisitc legacy is that which Jean Dubuffet termed "Art Brut". Art Brut, by definition, eschews external influence and thus is often the product of societies' most tortured, turbulent, and insular minds.

Academicists - those who "learn" art through study and imitation rather than self-reflection - have coined the term "Outsider Art" in an attempt to mitigate the impact of these arts from "the fringe". In reality, Outsider Art is the truest form of art; art devoid of restraints and forged from the depths of psychological introspection. It comes from within; and InnerArt.net is a celebration of this type of art and its artists.

Examples of Art Brut

Matt MacPherson

Adolf Wölfli

Henry Darger

Salvador Dalí

The author of this website has been drawing as a form of meditation since early childhood, but only began saving and publicizing his work in 2003. He obtained a BS in electrical engineering in 2002 and an MBA in finance in 2007, but considers himself an artist above any other label.

The term "Art Brut" was originally coined to describe Wölfli's work, whose rigid symmetry and mezmorizing attention to detail is a common characteristic of outsider art.

A reclusive janitor whose work was only discovered hidden amongst the clutter of his modest apartment after his death in 1973, Darger's "Story of the Vivienne Girls" is perhaps the best known example of genuine outsider art.

A little known fact is that Dali was a prmarily self-taught artist. He reluctantly attended an arts academy for a brief period in 1926 - after he had already been painting or sixteen years - but was quickly expelled, claiming "no one in the faculty was competent enough to examine me."

(c) 2009 innerart.net