Jean Fautrier

Jean Fautrier (born on 16 May 1898 in Paris 8th and died on 21 July 1964 in Châtenay-Malabry) was a French painter, illustrator, printmaker, and sculptor. He was one of the most important practitioners of Tachisme. Jean Fautrier is, along with Jean Dubuffet, the most important representative of the current of informal art (tachism). He is also a pioneer of high pulp technique.

Jean Fautrier was born in Paris in 1898. He was given his unwed mother’s surname and raised by his grandmother until she and his father both died in 1908. He then moved to London to be with his mother. There, in 1912, he began to study at the Royal Academy of Arts. Unsatisfied by instruction he thought too rigid, he left to study briefly at the Slade School, which was reputed to be more avant-garde. He was disappointed again and decided to go it alone, devoting himself to painting. The works he saw in the Tate Gallery made a far greater impression on him; he especially admired the paintings of J. M. W. Turner. He was called up for the French Army in 1917, but was discharged in 1921 due to his poor health.

He first exhibited his paintings at the Salon d’Automne in 1922 and at the Fabre Gallery in 1923. It was at the Galerie Fabre that he met art dealer Jeanne Castel, his first collector and friend. In 1923 he began producing etchings and engravings. His first solo exhibition was at the Galerie Visconti in Paris, in 1924.

In 1927, he painted a series of pictures (still lifes, nudes, landscapes) in which black dominates. In 1928 he met André Malraux through Castel. Malraux asked Fautrier to illustrate a text of his choice, but copyright issues kept him from using his first choice, Arthur Rimbaud’s ‘’Les Illuminations’’, and he settled instead with Dante’s Inferno. He produced 34 lithographs, but the publication, proposed by Gallimard, was deemed impossible and the project was abandoned in 1930. Until 1933 he divided his efforts between sculpture and painting. Short on funds, he spent the years 1934–1936 living in the resort of Tignes, where he made his living as a ski instructor and started a jazz club.

In 1939, just as World War II was beginning, Fautrier left the mountains, moving to Marseille, Aix-en-Provence, and Bordeaux before finally returning to Paris in 1940 and starting to paint once again. In Paris he met several poets and writers for whom he created illustrations. In January 1943, he was arrested by the German Gestapo. After brief imprisonment, he fled Paris and found refuge in Châtenay-Malabry, where he began work on the project of the Otages (or “Hostages”). These paintings were a response to the torture and execution of French citizens by the Nazis outside his residence, and were exhibited in 1945 with the Drouin gallery. In the years that followed, Fautrier worked on the illustrations of several works, among them L’Alleluiah by Georges Bataille, and made a series of paintings devoted to small familiar objects.

In 1950, with his companion, Jeanine Aeply, he invented a complex process combining chalcographic reproduction and painting, which allowed him to draw his works with several copies, in order to obtain what they called “multiple originals”.

In response to the invasion of Budapest by the Russians in 1956, Jean Fautrier takes up the motif of the hostages for the continuation of the partisans’ heads, variations on the verse “Freedom, I write your name” by Paul Éluard. Lastly, until his death in 1964, Fautrier painted more structured inscriptions in which streaks, colored lines and multi-sided grids were superimposed.

From 1945 to 1964 Jean Fautrier lived in “L’Île Verte”, a property he named after one of his paintings, located at 34 rue Eugène Sinet in Châtenay-Malabry. Purchased in 2003 by the General Council of Hauts de Seine, it is part of the greenery of the Vallée aux Loups, with the house of Châteaubriand and the Arboretum. The gardens are open all year round.

His late work is abstract, generally small in scale, often combining mixed media on paper. In 1960 he won the international grand prize at the Venice Biennale as well as another major award at the Tokyo Biennale the following year. He died in Châtenay-Malabry in 1964, the same year in which he had made donations to the Musée de l’Ile-de-France in Sceaux and Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris. A retrospective of his work opened there later that year. and was organized by the Gianadda Foundation at Martigny in January–March 2005.

Jean Fautrier gave form and consistency to the horrors of war – experienced firsthand during the German occupation of France – with Hostages, a series of works composed of around thirty examples, painted between 1942 and 1945, and almost all exhibited in the Drouin gallery in Paris. In these works, which express both the dramatic situation of the historical events during the conflict and the more general plight of twentieth century man, humanity, overcome by the most ferocious instincts, loses physiognomic descriptiveness and hence its own recognisability, assuming the violated and lacerated physicality of formless matter, like pieces of flesh from a slaughtered body. The material bears the deep stigmata of suffering and torment; the artist’s intense activity must also have felt like slow torture, as he gleaned his images from the paper placed on the table, mixing plaster of Paris and glue with a spatula, and finishing with a light coat of oil colours. These disfigured faces, stripped of all human characteristics, paved the way for what became his characteristic expressive style, in which the harsh and brutal material always played a crucial role, even though, over time, the colour scheme of his paintings tends to gradually lighten and lose the more dramatic connotations of his initial works. This process of clarification can be seen in Angles, in which the lumpy and conspicuous paste stands out from the thin background like a bas relief, arranged in a gridded weave that highlights a different intent of spatial geometry.