THIS IS THE PLACE FOR DISCOVERIES AND DISCUSSIONS OF THE MOST INVENTIVE ART FORMS – ALL KINDS OF ART THAT IS FAR-OUT, FANTASTIC, FREE-SPIRITED, FUN, FUNKY, PHENOMENAL AND GOOD FOR THE SOUL.


RECENT FEATURES
**ROB OBER: NO IDEOLOGY, PLEASE. THIS ART IS REAL.
“I am suspicious of art informed or directed by ideas or any ideology,” the American artist Rob Ober says. Keeping it real, authentic, shot through with a real pulse, and wildly colorful, Ober’s work feels irresistibly spontaneous and fresh. See. React. Paint. Here, the artist, who grew up all over the place, shares some thoughts about his art. Note to self: We’re in love with those gators. Click here to see article.
**JAMAICAN INTUITIVES: IT’S RAS DIZZY’S WORLD
Ras Dizzy (circa 1932-2008) was one of the most important of the Jamaican Intuitives, a group of self-taught artists whose works began to earn recognition in Jamaica in the late 1970s and notably contributed to shaping a sense of the postcolonial, independent island country’s national cultural identity. A selection of Dizzy’s works from a unique private collection. Click here to see article.
**A BIG, BOLD NEW BOOK: FRANÇOIS JAUVION’S TRIBUTE TO ART BRUT AND OUTSIDER ART MASTERS
In 2020, the French artist François Jauvion’s large-format book L’imagier singulier was published. It featured his own illustrations and texts by various specialists about the lives and accomplishments of numerous art brut and outsider artists. Now, a second volume of Jauvion’s big opus is here. See our overview of L’imagier singulier, Tome 2. Click here to see article.
**ARTIST CATHY WARD: IN LONDON, THE PSYCHIC, SOULFUL MESSAGES OF “THE ORACLES”
Like many art-makers, what with the effects of the coronavirus pandemic period and other concerns, the London-based artist Cathy Ward, who works in various media and genres, has wrestled with numerous, big challenges. Recently, as if purging the negative energy surrounding her, Ward sat down in a corner of her home to create a series of bold, mystical paintings. “They allowed me to reset myself,” she says. See a portfolio of these powerful new pictures. Click here to see article.
**PHOTOGRAPHER JOEL SIMPSON: CAPTURING NATURE’S BIZARRE CREATIVE SPIRIT — AND POWER
The photographer Joel Simpson travels widely in search of unusual natural rock formations and strange textures in the surface of the earth. Here, a selection of new photos from Simpson’s latest expeditions to the Southwest of the U.S.A. illustrates a theoretical approach he has developed to appreciating such striking images. As he notes, it leads viewers “from traditional landscape through abstraction, figuration, and finally to fiction." Click here to see article.
**OFF THE WALL: NEW YORK CITY STREET POETS AND VISIONARIES, THE KENNETH GOLDSMITH COLLECTION
In the 1980s, Kenneth Goldsmith, a poet and university professor, began tearing off anonymously made, handwritten ads, religious-themed proclamations, and oddball declarations that he found posted on walls and lampposts on the streets of New York City. A bemusing selection of such bizarre “poetry” was recently shown at Andrew Edlin Gallery. Click here to see article.
**GENEVA, SWITZERLAND: EMMANUEL HERZ’S JELLYFISH INVASION
Earlier this year, at the café/restaurant Remor in Geneva, Switzerland, we stumbled upon a stunning display of Emmanuel Herz’s festive “Fascinantes Méduses” (“Fascinating Jellyfish”), a group of sculptures and paintings that had taken over the old joint’s ceiling lamps and walls. We were smitten — and maybe also bitten. See out photo-filled report. Click here to see article.
AMANDA MIEHLE: A TEENAGE ARTIST STEPS OUT

We catch up with a young artist based in rural Pennsylvania whose work was first featured in brutjournal’s inaugural issue in 2021. As Amanda Miehle continues developing some signature motifs, her work is now being presented in a first-ever gallery exhibition.
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STEVEN HIRSCH: A SENSE OF PLACE AND SOMETHING TO CROW ABOUT

For New York’s tabloids, brutjournal photographer and artist Steven Hirsch snaps photos of law-breakers at Manhattan’s criminal courts. Sometimes he visits other places, as when he headed to far upstate New York, where he saw a sight that inspired a place-commemorating series of paintings. Free-access article.
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EXPLORATIONS. DISCOVERIES. A SENSE OF PLACE.

This month, we have the notion of a sense of place in mind as we poke around looking for — and, as always, enthusiastically and inquisitively at — art, art, art and the artists’ ideas that shape their creations. What does it mean to have and to be inspired by a sense of place? What does it mean to create something fresh and original? Just askin’— and savoring what we find in response to such questions. Free-access article.
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MOMOKO SUZUKI: A PAINSTAKING METHOD — AND A WALL

Based in Tokyo, Momoko Suzuki employs a meticulous drawing technique. Using only mechanical pencils and erasers, she spends weeks or months executing large-scale abstract works directly on interior walls. Her latest exhibition took place in a most unusual location. Free-access article.
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ISSEI NISHIMURA: AN UNSINKABLE NEED TO PAINT

This month, we catch up with the reclusive Japanese artist Issei Nishimura on the occasion of his latest gallery exhibition, in Nagoya. Like many artists, he has emerged from a pandemic-related slowdown. Now, again, his paint-flinging can’t be stopped. Free-access.
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