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Andrew
Edlin Gallery is pleased to announce the forthcoming opening of "Darger
Discoveries", a concentrated and illuminating new survey of mixed-media
works by the legendary Chicago recluse and autodidact Henry Darger (1892-1973).
"Darger
Discoveries" will feature several newly available, emblematic works
from the self-taught master's oeuvre that have been shown in important
exhibitions in the U.S. (including Disasters of War, PS1/ MOMA), Europe and Japan.
They include double-sided, panoramic drawings of groups of Blengins in
little-girl incarnations, sometimes with parachute-sized butterfly
wings. Surrounded by succulent, pop-colored flowers, and infused with
collaged cut-outs from magazines, these images evoke 1960s psychedelia
and feature many of Darger's signature themes and motifs. Undoubtedly
some of his greatest masterpieces, these drawings display an exquisite
handling of color and composition, and evoke a mood at once idyllic and
oddly foreboding
One of the definitive giants in the outsider art field, Darger, working in self-imposed isolation, conceived and wrote In the Realms of the Unreal, an epic fantasy of good versus evil, which he illustrated over many
years in a technically innovative and thematically complex series of
mixed-media drawings and collages on paper. Darger's imaginary world
and the story that unfolds within it feature such vivid characters as
the virtuous Vivian Girls; the child-enslaving Glandelinians; and the
sometimes benevolent, sometimes ominous Blengiglomeneans, or
Blengins-large, winged creatures with curled horns that occasionally
take human form. Darger's work has become increasingly recognized
internationally, winning praise from critics, art historians, curators
and collectors for the originality and prescience his of his vision.
Coinciding
with this presentation, the exhibition "Darger-ism: Contemporary
Artists and Henry Darger" at the American Folk Art Museum in New York
(April 15-September 21) will be on view. Since his death in 1973, the
artist's work has been particularly inspiring for a new generation of
contemporary artists who appreciate Darger's integration of
pop-cultural sources such as children's coloring books, comics, and
Catholic-biblical imagery, all antecedents of today's postmodernist,
appropriationist tendencies.