![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | sans titreLe Prisonnier de Bâleuntitled, between 1928 and 1934 sculpture, soft bread and painting height 16 cm © photo credit Collection de l’Art Brut, Lausanne AuthorLe Prisonnier de Bâle (1877-1934), Italy BiographyThe Prisoner of Basle (Joseph Giavarini) was born in a village near Parma, Italy. He lived at his godfather’s house together with his mother, who worked in a spinning mill. The boy was then placed as a farmhand, then worked as a builder. Six years later, he went abroad, to France then to Germany, where he became a foreman and eventually general foreman. He married, established a family and, at the age of 30, settled in Basle, Switzerland. Alone in his cell, he started to create groups of figurines, at first with breadcrumbs which he kneaded with his hands, and then with raw clay that his family brought when they visited him. Having shaped the statuettes, he painted them, before soaking them in strong glue to give a varnished look. The work represents acrobats with enormous elastic limbs, accompanied by a strange brass band. Shop
Exhibition(s) at the Art Brut Collection
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