L'Île du Guesclin, a tiny island in the commune of Saint-Coulomb and accessible on foot at low tide, is a private island now owned by a German couple who fell in love with it, not knowing that at one time it belonged to the singer and poet Léo Ferré. Ferré bought the site in 1959 and moved in here with his wife and his pet chimpanzee before moving on to the Château de Perdrigal. The building was in disrepair from 1969 to 2016.
23 September 2019
Les Rochers sculptés de L'Abbé Fouré, Rothéneuf, Saint-Malo, Ille-et-Vilaine (35)
Libellés :
Fouré (L'Abbé),
Ille-et-Vilaine (35),
Rothéneuf (35),
Saint-Malo (35)
I shall be commenting more on Les Rochers sculptés de Rothéneuf in a future post on a booklet about L'Abbé Fouré (1839-1910), the 'Hermit of Rothéneuf' (born Adolphe Julien Fouéré), but enough now to say that for thirteen years this man sculpted, sometimes in the night, over a surface of 500 square metres, 300 figures out of granite on the rocks just within the commune of Saint-Malo. L'Abbé Fouré was a precursor of Art Brut, self-taught, with no pretensions to being an artist. After thirty years as vicaire and recteur in communes in Brittany, he was forced to retire in 1894 due to being 'hard of hearing'. At Rothéneuf, five miles from the town of Saint-Malo, he undertook his self-imposed task. Below is a part of the really remarkable efforts he made, now sadly being gradually eroded by the sea, and paradoxically by those fascinated by his work, as they walk over the bodies and the faces created by L'Abbé Fouré. He is buried in the cemetery a little to the south of the village.
Art brut (Outsider Art) and associated:
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Rémy Callot, Carvin (Nord)
Carine Fol (ed.): L'Art brut en question | Outsider Art in Question
Kevin Duffy, Ashton-in-Makerfield
The Art Brut of Léopold Truc, Cabrières d'Avignon (34)
Le Musée Extraordinaire de Georges Mazoyer, Ansouis (34)
Le Facteur Cheval's Palais Idéal, Hauterives (26)
The Little Chapel, Guernsey
Museum of Appalachia, Norris, Clinton, Tennessee
Ed Leedskalnin in Homestead, Florida
La Fabuloserie, Dicy, Yonne (89)
Street Art City, Lurcy-Lévis, Allier (03)
The Outsider Art of Jean Linard, Neuvy-deux-Clochers (18)
Jean Bertholle, La Fabuloserie, Yonne (89)
Jean-Pierre Schetz, La Fabuloserie, Yonne (89)
Jules Damloup, La Fabuloserie, Yonne (89)
Camille Vidal, La Fabuloserie, Yonne (89)
Pascal Verbena, La Fabuloserie, Yonne (89)
The Art of Theodore Major
Edward Gorey's Yarmouth Port, Cape Cod, MA
Marcel Vinsard in Pontcharra, Isère (38)
Vincent Capt: Écrivainer : La langue morcelée de Samuel Daiber
The Amazing World of Danielle Jacqui, Roquevaire (13)
Alphonse Gurlie, Maisonneuve (07)
Univers du poète ferrailleur, Lizio, Morbihan
Les Rochers sculptés de L'Abbé Fouré, Rothéneuf, Saint-Malo
Robert Tatin in Cossé-le-Vivien, Mayenne
René Raoul's Jardin de pierre in Pléhédel, Côtes d'Armor
La Demeure du Chaos, Saint-Romain-au-Mont-d'Or, Rhône (69)
Emmanuel Arredondo in Varennes Vauzelles, Nièvre (58)
Musée de la Luna Rossa (revisited), Caen, Calvados (14)
La Fontaine de Château-Chinon, Nièvre (58)
Fadhma Amrouche in Baillé, Ille-et-Vilaine (35)
Libellés :
Amrouche (Fadhma),
Baillé (35),
Ille-et-Vilaine (35)
Fadhma Aït Mansour Amrouche (1882-1967) was born in Tizi Hibel, Algeria, and died in Saint-Brice-en-Coglès (Ille-et-Vilaine). Her mother Ayna married a much older man when she was very young and on his death she chose to live alone with her two children. The custom was for the widow to live with her mother, which her brother Kaci wanted, but she refused and Kaci severed communication with Ayna, meaning that she was unable to be present at her mother's funeral. Ayna had a relationship with another man, who refused to accept that he was the father of a child she had, and she was excluded from the community.
This third child was Fadhma, the 'illegitimate' daughter of a widow, and Ayna sent her to a mission run by Catholic nuns, where she was miserable, but passed her certificats d'études in 1892. She returned to her village and her (remarried) mother, who taught her Algerian customs, songs and Kabyle poems. She later converted to Catholicism, married a Catholic Algerian (Antoine-Belkacem Amrouche) when she was sixteen and he was eighteen, and had eight children by him. Two of these children went on to be writers, Jean (1906-1962) and Taos Amrouche (1913-1976) being noted for their radio interviews with Jean Giono.
Fadhma (now renamed Marguerite) spent most of her adult life in Tunis, where she went with her husband and children, but her heart remained in Kabylia. She passed on many berber songs and stories to Jean and Taos, and in 1930 the three began writing and translating into French this traditionally oral tradition. Fadhma began writing her own poems. Her autobiography Histoire de ma vie was published posthumously in 1968. Allée Fadhma Amrouche leads to the cemetery in Baillé, where she is buried.
22 September 2019
George Brummell, aka Beau Brummell in Caen, Calvados (14)
Libellés :
Brummell (Beau),
Brummell (George),
Caen (14),
Calvados (14)
I'd only vaguely heard of Beau Brummell many years ago, although I was not acquainted with anything about his life history, other than knowing that he was a dandy. But a fuller picture of him makes very interesting reading, such as the hours he took to dress, the bills his obsession for clothes amounted to, his flight to France from his English creditors, and his death in Caen in very reduced circumstances. He is buried here in what are now university grounds in the very small Protestant cemetery. Interestingly, his clothes appear to have had a subsequent influence on the way we dress.
Boîte à lire in Caen, Calvados (14)
Libellés :
Boîte à lire,
Caen (14),
Calvados (14)
One of two identical boîtes à lire in the jardin des plantes in Caen. I like the pencil.
Boîtes à lire:
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Boîte à Lire, Dicy, Nièvre
Boîte à lire, Maisons-Laffitte, Yvelines
Boîte à lire, Sorigny, Indre-et-Loire
Boîte à Lire, Jonzac, Charente-Maritime
Boîte à lire, La Roque-d'Anthéron, Bouches-du-Rhône
Boîte à Lire, Épineuil-le-Fleuriel, Cher
Boîte à lire, Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône
Boîte à lire, East Markham, UK
Boîte à lire, La Folie Couvrechef, Caen, Calvados
Boîte à lire, Bergues, Nord
Boîte à lire, Le Havre, Seine-Maritime
Boîte à lire, Villerville, Calvados
Boîte à lire, Saint-Servan, Saint-Malo, Ille-et-Vilaine
Boîte à lire in Caen, Calvados
Boîte à Lire, Noyant d'Allier, Allier
Boîte à lire, Dampierre-en-Burly, Loiret
Boîte à lire, Illiers-Combray, Eure-et-Loir
Boîte à lire, Chartres, Eure-et-Loir
Boîte à lire, Saint-Romain-au-Mont-d'Or, Rhône
Charles Lemaître in Caen, Calvados (14)
Libellés :
Caen (14),
Calvados (14),
Lemaitre (Charles)
Charles Lemaître, who was born in 1854 in Saint-Georges-d'Aunay and 1928 in Caen, was a poet who wrote in Norman French, and nicknamed 'Le Chansonnier du Bocage'. The original bust of 1932 in the jardin des plantes was melted by the Germans in the war, but this second one was erected in 1981. His works: Eiou qu'y va lé trachi, Contes drolatiques en patois bas-normand, (1912); Les Joyeux Bocains (1917); Hélas qu'c'est drôle (1924); and Bonnes gens de Normandie (1941).
René Duchez in Caen, Calvados (14)
Libellés :
Caen (14),
Calvados (14),
Duchez (René)
René Duchez (1903-48) was a hero of the French Resistance, the Caen group, and is noted for stealing plans of the Atlantic wall: he was a painter who contrived to be employed by the kommandantur. This part of his biography was very losely adapted as a film by Marcel Camus entitled Le Mur de l'Atlantique (1970), starring Bourvil.
21 September 2019
Univers du poète ferrailleur, Lizio, Morbihan (56)
Libellés :
Coudray (Robert),
Lizio (56),
Morbihan (56)
Robert Coudray (born 1954) is the poet in Univers du poète-ferrailleur (poet-scrap merchant) a little outside Lizio, a tiny village in Morbihan. He has built a magical world of bizarre, fairy tale buildings, with seventy animated creations. Children may love this, but so too do adults: many comments online are that this museum, if we can call it that, brings out the child in the adult. Using recycled materials, he certainly creates a different universe.
Among a number of other occupations, Coudray has been a 'McDo' worker, a hewer of wood, a builder of carnival floats, a teacher, a film maker, and so on. He envied kids who knew what they wanted to be from the start, as he had no idea what he wanted to be. Eventually, a bricoleur extraordinaire is what he has chosen to be, which is obviously something he excels at. 'Useless' natural materials gathered from the tip or elsewhere – wood, straw, soil, hemp, cork, etc – are given a new life. Geese and hens freely weave in and out of the universe here. In the shop there are copies of Coudray's written poems, although the poetry of this place is largely visual: by pressing one of the many buttons at the side of the installations indoors, the weird objects move in a dancing-style movement, the metallic sounds lulling the viewer.
Refusal is written throughout this universe, refusal to conform to society's norms, to be straightjacketed into normality. Pacifist anarchy reigns, and although there are many delights that amused me here, I found the last photo here particularly amusing: a monument in remembrance of deserters. This is dedicated to cowards who don't want their flesh to be turned to pudding; to loving people who prefer their family to their country; to the non-violent who don't want to rip their brothers' guts out; to the wise who fly over wars and whims; to those who don't give in and are unconquerable, refusing to toe any line; to anarchists who belong to no one; to freedom, which has the same value as fidelity; to the smiles of living men in memory of those who died sadly. What a wonderful manifesto!
Unfortunately, Google refused to accept the many very, very short videos I made of the moving installations.
Art brut (Outsider Art) and associated:
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Rémy Callot, Carvin (Nord)
Carine Fol (ed.): L'Art brut en question | Outsider Art in Question
Kevin Duffy, Ashton-in-Makerfield
The Art Brut of Léopold Truc, Cabrières d'Avignon (34)
Le Musée Extraordinaire de Georges Mazoyer, Ansouis (34)
Le Facteur Cheval's Palais Idéal, Hauterives (26)
The Little Chapel, Guernsey
Museum of Appalachia, Norris, Clinton, Tennessee
Ed Leedskalnin in Homestead, Florida
La Fabuloserie, Dicy, Yonne (89)
Street Art City, Lurcy-Lévis, Allier (03)
The Outsider Art of Jean Linard, Neuvy-deux-Clochers (18)
Jean Bertholle, La Fabuloserie, Yonne (89)
Jean-Pierre Schetz, La Fabuloserie, Yonne (89)
Jules Damloup, La Fabuloserie, Yonne (89)
Camille Vidal, La Fabuloserie, Yonne (89)
Pascal Verbena, La Fabuloserie, Yonne (89)
The Art of Theodore Major
Edward Gorey's Yarmouth Port, Cape Cod, MA
Marcel Vinsard in Pontcharra, Isère (38)
Vincent Capt: Écrivainer : La langue morcelée de Samuel Daiber
The Amazing World of Danielle Jacqui, Roquevaire (13)
Alphonse Gurlie, Maisonneuve (07)
Univers du poète ferrailleur, Lizio, Morbihan
Les Rochers sculptés de L'Abbé Fouré, Rothéneuf, Saint-Malo
Robert Tatin in Cossé-le-Vivien, Mayenne
René Raoul's Jardin de pierre in Pléhédel, Côtes d'Armor
La Demeure du Chaos, Saint-Romain-au-Mont-d'Or, Rhône (69)
Emmanuel Arredondo in Varennes Vauzelles, Nièvre (58)
Musée de la Luna Rossa (revisited), Caen, Calvados (14)
La Fontaine de Château-Chinon, Nièvre (58)
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