eric | Shared With: Everyone - Nov 01 2006 | art, Henry Darger, museum, Seattle, Frye Art Museum
eric | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 26 2006 | art, Henry Darger, artist, Frye Art Museum, Seattle
My friend Sung (user: skim) has highly recommended the Henry Darger show at the Frye. It's on exhibit until October 29th.
Quoted: Henry Darger (1892–1973) was a self-taught reclusive artist who created and inhabited an imaginary world through extensive writings, paintings, and drawings. After Darger’s death, his Chicago neighbor and landlord discovered and made public Darger’s previously unknown volume of work.
Quoted: This solitary artist left behind several diaries and manuscripts including a six-part weather journal, an autobiography in eight volumes, and his 15,000-page illustrated epic, The Story of the Vivian Girls, in What Is Known as the Realms of the Unreal. Accompanied by watercolor paintings and collages, the novel focuses on a band of girls’ heroic efforts to free enslaved children held captive by an army of adults. The novel and its illustrations are whimsical and sinister in their depiction of war and peace and good versus evil.
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- Sri - Nov 01 2006
- eric - Nov 02 2006
You must be Eric's friend before you can comment on this Fave.I saw this exhibit at the fry...
honeslty I was not impresssed... he seemed like a total crazy inasane man. some of the drawings totally creped me out.
He apparently worked in complete obscurity for his whole life and left this crazy whacked out legacy of artistic work. The whole point is that he did not see things as most people did. I think it's fairly natural to be creeped out...
I still want to check it out sometime. Anybody that writes a 15,000 page opus is worth looking into - cause that ain't normal...
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