Whitehot Magazine

The Doors of Perception: Visionary Artists at Frieze New York

George Widener, Megalopolis 2143, Rare Twins, 2008. Ink & poster paint on paper, 18 x 28 in (46 x 71 cm). Courtesy of Andrew Edlin Gallery, New York

By PAUL LASTER, May, 2019

Seeing Frieze Magazine and Frieze Art Fairs co-founder Amanda Sharp on opening day of the fair I told her that I was going to write about “The Doors of Perception” exhibition, to which she replied, “It’s my favorite thing here.” It’s no wonder, with 318 works by 40 visionary artists, it’s the biggest thing in the tent.

Organized as a collaboration between Frieze New York and the Outsider Art Fair (OAF) and curated by artist Javier Téllez, “The Doors of Perception” features an outstanding selection of works by self-taught artists, psychiatric patients and self-proclaimed visionaries.   

Henry Darger, Grimecian Gazoonian, n.d.. Watercolor and pencil on paper, 19 x 24 in (48 x 61 cm). Courtesy of Andrew Edlin, Gallery, New York

“I was invited to create an exhibition about Outsider Art and since I’m the son of two psychiatrists and have been making work about mental illness for the past two decades, this type of art has long been a passion of mine,” Téllez told Whitehot at the preview. “I’ve been looking at Art Brut and traveling to see the most famous collections of Outsider Art since my teenage years.”  

Ranging from such celebrated masters of Outsider Art and Art Brut as Adolf Wölfli, Henry Darger, Martín Ramírez and Eugene Von Bruenchenhein to current creators like Noviadi Angkasapura, George Widener and Davood Koochaki, the artists have multiple pieces coming from such OAF leading galleries in the field as Henry Boxer, Cavin-Morris, Creative Growth Art Center, Andrew Edlin, Carl Hammer, Pol Lemétais, Polysémie, Ricco/ Maresca and SHRINE, as well as several private collections. 

Eugene von Bruenchenhein, Steel-Imperial City, June 1978. Oil on cardboard, 33.75 x 29.5 in (86 x 75 cm). Courtesy of Andrew Edlin Gallery, New York

“I was allowed to select any artists that I wanted from both galleries and private collections,” said Téllez. “Many of the works are sourced from galleries that participate in the Outsider Art Fair, but a number of others came from unrelated galleries and collectors.” 

The works are exhibited in a maze-like structure with hallways that twist and turn around a square floor plan and interior rooms that resemble small galleries. The walls are covered from floor to ceiling with gray fire blankets—the kind that city agencies give to homeless people to protect them from falling asleep with cigarettes and open fires. Hung on both sides of the hallways and displayed salon-style, as well as on tables in the interior spaces, the highly engaging paintings, drawings and sculptures occupy the spaces like protestors marching through narrow streets. 

The Doors of Perception, installation view. Photo: Olya Vysotskaya

“I designed a maze-like structure that’s like a Möbius loop or a snake that bites its tail,” Téllez added. “I’ve met a number of outsider artists and visited their homes and sites of production and this is how they hang their work. A lot of people who deal with Outsider Art don’t now how to show it. One of the biggest mistakes is to show it in relationship to modern and contemporary art, which just repeats the infamous “Primitivism” exhibition at MoMA in the 1980s. Just because two things appear the same doesn’t mean they are the same. It’s important to respect difference. I used the fire blankets on the walls to protect these artists from the context of the art fair.”

There are powerful pieces in the show, including Darger's panorama with the Vivian Girls and his fantastic watercolor of an imaginary “Grimecian Gazoonian” dragon with wings; Martín Ramírez’s repeated arches, with and without people occupying them; Eugene Von Bruenchenhein’s cities of steel with buildings formed from the imprint of the edge of inked cardboard on a cardboard ground; Dwight Mackintosh’s accumulations of ink pen scribbles; and Davood Koochaki’s surreal graphite figures. 

Carlo Zinelli, Untitled, 1960. Tempera on paper, 14 x 20 in (35.5 x 51 cm). Courtesy of Galerie Pol Lemétais, Saint Sever du Moustier, France

“Frieze is actually a good context for a show like this one,” Téllez summarized. “It’s on Randall’s Island, and even though many of the artworks in “The Doors of Perception” are for sale, the show is really an island within the island, which brings to mind something that Paul Laffoley once said: I am not an outsider artist, because I never go outside.” 

Inside the “The Doors of Perception” is like a stroll through the back alleys of Venice—a place so full of wonder that it doesn’t even matter if you somehow lose your way. WM

Friedrich Schröder-Sonnenstern, Das Mondkulturchandmal, 1961. Colored pencil on cardboard, 19.6 x 28.3 in (50 x 72 cm). Courtesy of Galerie Pol Lemétais, St. Sever du Moustier

Dwight Mackintosh, Untitled, 1994. Ink on paper, 11 x 15 in (28 x 38 cm). Courtesy of Creative Growth Art Center, Oakland, CA

The Doors of Perception, installation view. Photo: Olya Vysotskaya
Anna Zemánková, Untitled, early 1960s. Pastel on paper, 34.5 x 24.4 in (88 x 62 cm). Courtesy of Cavin-Morris Gallery, New York
 

Davood Koochaki Untitled, n.d. Graphite on paper, 39 x 27.5 in (99 x 70 cm). Courtesy of Galerie Polysémie, Marseille

Noviadi Angkasapura, Untitled, 2017. Ballpoint pen and graphite on paper, 12 x 16 in (30.5 x 40.5 cm). Courtesy of Cavin-Morris Gallery, New York
 

The Doors of Perception, installation view. Photo: Olya Vysotskaya

Martín Ramírez, Untitled (Arches), c. 1960-63. Gouache, colored pencil, and graphite on pieced paper, 20 x 90 in (51 x 229 cm). Courtesy of Ricco/Maresca Gallery, New York

Janko Domsic, Untitled, n.d. Ballpoint pen on cardboard, 12 x 16 in (30 x 41 cm). Collection: Alain Bourbonnais

Adolf Wölfli, Bangali Firework (Bänggaalisches Feuerwärk), 1926. Colored pencil on paper, 18.5 x 24 in (47 x 61 cm). Private Collection, New York


Paul Laster

Paul Laster is a writer, editor, curator, artist and lecturer. He’s a contributing editor at ArtAsiaPacific and Whitehot Magazine of Contemporary Art and writer for Time Out New York, Harper’s Bazaar Arabia, Galerie Magazine, Sculpture, Art & Object, Cultured, Architectural Digest, Garage, Surface, Ocula, Observer, ArtPulse, Conceptual Fine Arts and Glasstire. He was the founding editor of Artkrush, started The Daily Beast’s art section, and was art editor of Russell Simmons’ OneWorld Magazine, as well as a curator at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, now MoMA PS1.

 

 

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