ZURICH.- Hauser & Wirth Zürich is presenting Jean Dubuffet and the City, an exhibition dedicated to the seminal post-war European painter and sculptor, and his lifelong fascination with urban space. Curated by Dubuffet specialist Dr Sophie Berrebi, with the Fondation Dubuffet contributing research advice, this is the first presentation that focuses on exploring the role of the city in Dubuffets four decades of artistic accomplishments, highlighting the artists shifting depiction of urban characters, and the visual and experiential dynamism of Paris that influenced his work. The exhibition features over 50 important paintings, works on paper, architectural and sculpture models including works from series such as the Marionettes de la ville et de la campagne (1943 1945), Paris Circus (1961 1962), L'Hourloupe (1962 - 1974) and Théâtres de mémoire (1975 1979) which are displayed thematically to demonstrate the artists continuous and nuanced engagement with the city.
While Dubuffets relationship to architecture is well documented, this exhibition proposes a new interpretation of Dubuffet's work through his depiction of the city's buildings, streets, squares and inhabitants. Paris itself is the predominant subject in these works, and yet the city also reoccurs in Dubuffet's oeuvre as a metaphor for painting itself; a space in which figure and background combine in endlessly evolving permutations that can be repeatedly observed, imagined and represented. In several of the works in the exhibition, the city becomes an endless pattern of forms, suggestive of the material and immaterial networks that run through the urban space. Dubuffet used the spectacular image of a city highway network to explain the workings of the mind in a letter he wrote in 1978: It is impossible not to contradict oneself, just as it is impossible to avoid collisions on paths that have only one slope, but one must organise thoughts following the model of the circulation of cars in Tokyo, with lanes that are superimposed onto one another and on which traffic is organised in different directions.
To highlight the recurrence of these themes and motifs, the presentation is organised in three parts. The first room, City Dwellers and Urban Types brings together depictions of passers-by and urban wanderers painted from the early 1940s to the early 1980s. The juxtaposition of works executed in vastly different styles makes it possible to identify unexpected convergences between them. The haunting, almost translucent LHomme aux Cocardes (1952) which depicts a figure as both a hero and an idler, contrasts with the energetic Rhéteur au mur (1945), while the quizzical yet monumental Le citadin (1974) has an affinity with the rarely seen Petit Hurleur (1944). In this first section of the exhibition, individual figures alternate with visions of crowds and with pairs of figures, of which two similar paintings from the L'Hourloupe series are exhibited together for the first time: Main leste et rescousse (1964) and Époux en visite (1964), on loan from Tate and Fondation Gandur respectively.
The second part of the exhibition is entitled City Views and Imaginary Networks' and features paintings from the Paris Circus series that depict the busy streets of the French capital at the beginning of the 1960s, a moment when Paris stood on the brink of modernisation. The quaint shop fronts, facades and bustling traffic of Maison Fondée (1961) powerfully conjures up this divergence of old and new. The Paris Circus works are interspersed with huge, complex paintings from the Théâtres de mémoire series in which Dubuffet replicates the dynamism of the city through juxtaposed scenes, images of places and moments.
Dubuffet's extraordinary models for sculptures and utopian architectural structures feature in both the second and the third section of the exhibition entitled Sites and Architecture. Three key works on loan from Fondation Dubuffet, Paris reveal the artists interest in the fabric of the city itself and his consideration of the built environment: La Rue (1971 1974), Le Cirque (1970), Rues et Immeubles de la ville (ca. 1969). The notion of site, which predominates in the titles of Dubuffet's later works, invites viewers to pause and consider the urban space around them, in the manner of the pensive figures in the work Site aléatoire avec deux personages (1982). Two compelling works dating from 1957, Chaussée grise and Chaussée urbaine mouillée both depict, with dizzying effect, the pavement under our feet inviting closer scrutiny of the very fabric of the city. The discovery of Dubuffets shifts in vision, from representation to imagination and from evocation to construction of an urban imagination allows for a renewed understanding of the artist's oeuvre and the significance of the city.