Friday, April 16, 2010

Henry Darger (outsider artist)


The horns on these Blengiglomenean serpents seem more phalangic than phallic.

In 1973, at a Catholic poor house in Chicago, an 81-year-old retired janitor quietly died. His name was Henry Darger. Just months earlier, he had moved from the rented room where he had lived for over 40 years. When his landlords, Nathan and Kiyoko Lerner, cleaned out the clutter room, they discovered paintings: hundreds of brilliant watercolors, some over 10 feet long. The images were disturbing and mysteriously beautiful: little girls frolicking under stormy skies, little girls fighting soldiers, little girls being rescued by fantastic winged creatures.

The landlords soon found the other half of Darger's life's work, perhaps the longest novel ever written: the more than 15,000 page, single-spaced typed In the Realms of the Unreal, an epic story of the virtuous Vivian girls and their religious war against the evil Glandelinian army. For most of his life, Henry Darger, a recluse whom others called "Crazy," had lived in this rich fantasy world. It was a world he had kept to himself.

Today, Henry Darger is considered to be one of America's foremost outsider artists: an untaught artist working in isolation from the commercial or public eye. In the Realms of the Unreal, an adventurous documentary feature, explores the fantastic vision and shadowy life of this enigmatic artist. (from the movie: In the Realms of the Unreal)

LINK with additional pictures and scroll down for an article from A Personal Recollection by Nathan Lerner
Folk Art Museum NYC click on the smaller picture to the right

Full PBS video of In the Realms of the Unreal (click on following parts from the YouTube menu)



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