The Chelsea Art Museum is the home
of the Miotte Foundation, dedicated to archiving and conserving
the oeuvre of Jean Miotte and
providing new scholarship and research on LInformel. Miottes
extensive collected works are preserved as a legacy for New York,
where he has had a studio in SoHo since 1978.
Jean Miotte
Jean Miotte, (b.1926) came of artistic age in the decade after
World War II when non-figurative gestural abstraction was emerging
on both sides of the Atlantic as the contemporary artistic language.
The term, "L'Art Informel," was coined by the French
critic, Michel Tapi, to connote "without form." The
negation of traditional form, a radical break from established
notions of order and composition, was particularly suited to
a cultural environment born out of the circumstances of post
war Europe where abuse of morals and fascist ideology had led
to such horror and destruction.
While Informel is often regarded
as the European equivalent of Abstract Expressionism, it is
distinguished from its American counterpart,
by a loss of faith in progress and the collective possibilities
of an avant garde. Rather the artists who came to be grouped
as Informel, Jean Miotte, Jean-Paul Riopelle, Emil Schumacher and
Kazuo Shiraga among others, claimed an individual freedom embodied
in the spontaneity of the gestural brushstroke. Miotte developed
a vocabulary of bold, quasi-calligraphic markings whose vaulting,
liquid jets and arcs of paint were at once suggestive of the
body
in motion while at the same time denying corporality. Of prime
importance for Miotte was the aspiration for this gestural, abstract
language to create a bridge between cultures, to break beyond
national barriers of geography or expression to form a truly international
language.
The power and transcultural appeal of this painting was
soon seen in its international reception. Miotte was invited
to exhibit throughout
Europe, America, the near and far East long before the concept
of globalization was current in artistic terms. But whereas globalization
tends toward cultural uniformity, Miotte's work fostered individual
dialogue within each culture.
While Miotte's work remains committed to the Utopian aspects
of gestural abstraction, he has continued to grow, fighting the
repetition
of a signature style constantly pushing the boundaries and possibilities
of the line, the gesture and the liquidity of paint.
jeanmiotte.com |
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A hue et à dia
1994,
Acrylique sur toile,
260 x 195 cm |
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Ouverture
1992,
Acrylique sur toile,
130 x 97 cm |
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Composition
1962,
Gouache,
54 x 75 cm |
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Instant ébloui
1979,
Acrylique sur toile,
162 x 130 cm |
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