Outsider art, formerly known as art brut, is created by an untrained, eccentric artist who is typically unconnected to the traditional art world—not by desire but by circumstance. Outsider art's "classic" figures were socially or culturally marginalized individuals. They were typically uneducated; they almost always had alternative worldviews, often at odds with the dominant culture; and many had been classified as mentally ill. Despite this, they created substantial-high-quality artistic oeuvres in the face of adversity and without regard for fame or money.

 In other ways, their art represents outlandish ideas, intricate dream worlds, and, on occasion, abnormal mental states. It's unprepared and unexpected. 'Outsider artists' operate discreetly outside the mainstream of art, with no formal training or degrees, and, more significantly, they don't do work for galleries or museums, and they are unconcerned by 'art circles' movements.

In the area of outsider art, some well-known artists include:

Henry Darger:

Henry Darger's story is the one that most closely resembles a fairy tale. Darger was born in Chicago in 1892 and spent his early years in the Lincoln Asylum for Feeble-Minded Children. He obtained work as a janitor after leaving at the age of 16. They'll hold up in any situation. They have a strong command of composition as well as a vibrant and intriguing use of color.' It's easy, she says, to get caught up in Darger's personal history when thinking about his art. Darger's art, like that of other great Outsider painters, transcends his narrative.

Bill Traylor:

Bill Traylor (1854-1949), a self-taught artist, was born into slavery in 1854 and only started making art in 1939 when he was 75 years old. After spending his whole working life on an Alabama plantation, he relocated to Montgomery in 1928, when he began to draw for the first time. Traylor, who believed he had 'raised 20-odd children in his lifetime, subsequently reasoned: 'My white folks had died, and my children had scattered.' Montgomery, on the other hand, proved to be a challenging place to live. Traylor was unable to work despite his efforts due to terrible rheumatism.

William Edmondson:

William Edmondson, abstract artist Los Angles was born to former slaves on a farm near Nashville, Tennessee, and relocated with his family to Nashville proper around 1890 after his childhood home was devastated by urban expansion. For much of his adult life, he worked for the Nashville, Chattanooga, and St. Louis Railway from 1900 to 1907, and then as a janitor at the Nashville Women's Hospital from roughly 1907 to 1931. Edmondson started a stonecutting company adjacent to his house in the early 1930s to make tombstones for his neighbours.

Conclusion:

Some Artists in Los Angeles are even musician who lived from 1971 to 2011. They pounced on his canvases with abandon, practically seldom using a brush and preferring to work only with his hands and fingers. Artists also fashioned animals out of vacuum hoses, wire, rope, and shattered and dismembered chairs and furniture.

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