Jean Dubuffet

The Hourloupe Cycle

On View
Mar 13 – Apr 26, 2025
New York
 
Pace Gallery is honored to present a major exhibition of works from Jean Dubuffet’s celebrated Hourloupe cycle. On view from March 13 to April 26 at the gallery’s 540 West 25th Street location in New York, the exhibition has been conceived to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Fondation Dubuffet last year.

It brings together a selection of important paintings, sculptures, and architectural models from public and private collections, including the monumental canvas Nunc Stans—among the largest paintings that Dubuffet ever created—on loan from the Guggenheim Museum in New York.

One of the great innovators of post-war European painting, Dubuffet looked to the margins of society—to the art of outsiders, mediums, the incarcerated, and the institutionalized—to liberate his own creativity. He coined the term “Art Brut” to describe the raw aesthetic of such outsiders, challenging the conventions of the period. Ahead of his time as both an artist and a philosopher, Dubuffet’s works posed fundamental questions about the nature of reality, leaving an indelible mark on the history of Modernism.

With the Hourloupe, Dubuffet used his practice as a means to reinvent the everyday in an alternate world. He posited the parallel universe of the Hourloupe, which the viewer was invited to imaginatively inhabit, to critique the consensus of reality—as if one might step through a portal in the humdrum existence of waking life into an alternative space of fantasy and possibility. The gallery’s upcoming exhibition in New York will showcase the dictionary of biomorphic forms that Dubuffet invented as part of the Hourloupe’s visual language of experience and sensation. Charting the artist’s use of a recurring alphabet of forms across painting, sculpture, and architecture, the show will reflect his lifelong effort to disrupt and refashion our modes of perception.

The Hourloupe cycle was the longest lasting series of Dubuffet’s career, comprising works created between 1962 and 1974. Pace, which has represented the artist since 1967, was the first American gallery to exhibit sculptures from L’Hourloupe in its inaugural exhibition of the artist’s work in 1968. A foundational figure in the gallery’s history, Dubuffet has been the subject of more than 20 solo exhibitions at Pace over the course of seven decades.

The Hourloupe style emerged in the early 1960s from Dubuffet’s Paris Circus period, the result of casual experiments with felt-tip markers. Creating absent-minded doodles in red, black, and blue pen while chatting on the telephone, Dubuffet arrived at a visual language resembling a web of meandering lines. These lines create interlocking shapes of negative space, which lock together like puzzle pieces. Over the course of more than ten years, he produced some of his best-known drawings, paintings, sculptures, and large-scale public environments in this style, comprising the cycle known as L’Hourloupe.

Anchoring Pace’s presentation is Nunc Stans (1965), a 26-foot-long painting on loan from the collection of the Guggenheim Museum in New York for the first time. This masterpiece of L’Hourloupe contains an inventory of characters and forms that recur throughout the cycle and the exhibition. The work’s title refers to the philosophical concept of eternity—the notion that there is no such thing as past and present, but only an eternal ‘now.’

“If Dubuffet teaches anything, it is that there are no conclusions, and no true beginnings,” the late critic Peter Schjeldahl once observed. “There is only the middle, the presentness of life.”

The exhibition also includes the 1966 painting Fusil Canardier, in which Dubuffet reimagines a punt gun as an animated creature, suggesting the metamorphic powers of L’Hourloupe to render alive what was previously inanimate. This uncanniness is reflected in the more figurative sculptures from the cycle, three of which will be on view at the gallery. In these large-scale works, including L'Incivil (1973–2014) and Le Facetieux (1973–2014), faces and limbs are abstracted and contorted but, like Fusil Canardier, retain a sense of anatomical familiarity.

Sculpture and architecture were central to Dubuffet’s process in the Hourloupe cycle. He realized his sculptural works first in polystyrene, which he produced by cutting through the material with a hot wire, creating maquettes for forms that would then be realized at a larger scale. The exhibition at Pace will feature Banc-Salon (1974–2024), a hybrid between a sculpture and an architectural bench, on which visitors are welcomed to sit beneath a sculptural cloud suspended from above. The show also includes the original nine-by-12-foot model of Dubuffet’s monumental, habitable environment, the Jardin d'email (1968), which the artist realized for grounds of the Kröller-Müller Museum in the Netherlands in 1974 and remains on view today. These works are presented with two wall-mounted ceramic compositions from 1965, as well as Comptoir amoncelant (1968), a still life of a food-laden counter. Together, these works express the artist’s aim to transpose domestic and quotidian scenes from our reality into the parallel universe of L'Hourloupe.

Pace’s exhibition is presented in collaboration with the Fondation Dubuffet. Founded by the artist himself, the Fondation Dubuffet’s mission is to protect and promote the work of Jean Dubuffet.

 
Films

Inside Jean Dubuffet's Alternate Reality

Pace Founder and Chairman Arne Glimcher recounts his early experiences with Jean Dubuffet in the 1960s and looks back on the gallery's first exhibition of his work in 1968. In this film, featuring rarely seen archival photographs and footage, Glimcher also sheds light on the significance of the Hourloupe—Dubuffet's longest lasting series, comprising painting, drawing, collage, sculpture, and architecture—in the context of the artist's practice. "The grotesque becomes beautiful, the beautiful becomes banal—the work is dancing," he says.

 

Checklist

Jean Dubuffet,
Tour aux Récits,
1973
1973-2007, polyurethane paint on epoxy, 13' 4" x 6' 2" x 6' 2" (406 cm x 188 cm x 188 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Banc-Salon,
1970
1970-2024, polyurethane paint on epoxy, overall dimensions variable 25" × 216" × 160" (63 cm × 549 cm × 405 cm), Banc-Salon 35-1/2" × 82-3/4" × 78-3/4" (90 cm × 210 cm × 200 cm), Cerf-Volant Le tétrapode 25-1/2" × 78-3/4" × 61" (65 cm × 200 cm × 155 cm), Cerf-Volant Le nébuleux
Jean Dubuffet,
Jardin d'email,
1968
1968, epoxy painted with polyurethane, 2' 7-3/4" x 9' 10" x 6' 6-3/4" (80 cm x 300 cm x 200 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Dimanche urbain,
1967
February 24, 1967, vinyl paint on canvas, 63-3/4" × 51-1/4" (162 cm × 130 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Etre et Paraitre,
1963
July 25, 1963, oil on canvas, 59" × 76-3/4" (150 cm × 195 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Site aux paysannes,
1966
March 19, 1966, vinyl paint on canvas, 32" × 39-1/2" (81 cm × 100 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Échange de Vues,
1963
1963, oil on canvas, 86-3/4" × 118-1/4" (220 cm × 300 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Comptoir amoncelant (Laden Counter),
1968
April 26, 1968, epoxy paint and polyurethane, in fifteen parts, 37-13/16" × 69-11/16" × 37-3/8" (96 cm × 177 cm × 95 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Offres galantes,
1967
January 27, 1967, vinyl paint on canvas, 51-1/4" × 63-3/4" (130 cm × 162 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
L'Incivil (after maquette dated 2 August-December 1973),
1973
1973-2014, polyurethane paint on epoxy, 12' 10-3/4" x 6' 11-1/8" x 2' 3/8" (393 cm x 211 cm x 62 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Le Facetieux (after maquette dated 20 May-December 1973),
1973
1973-2014, polyurethane paint on epoxy, 8' 1/2" x 6' 2-3/4" x 2' 9-1/2" (245 cm x 190 cm x 85 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Nunc Stans,
1965
May 16 - June 5, 1965, vinyl paint on canvas, 5' 3-3/4" × 8' 11-7/8" (161.9 cm × 274 cm) three panels/each 5' 3-3/4" × 26' 11-1/2" (161.9 cm × 821.7 cm) overall
Jean Dubuffet,
Le Porteur d'Horloge,
1965
April 4, 1965, vinyl paint on canvas, 63-3/4" × 31-1/2" (162 cm × 80 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Ciseaux I (Scissors I),
1966
1966, acrylic on canvas, 38-1/4" × 51-1/4" (97.2 cm × 130.2 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Fusil Canardier,
1966
January 30, 1966, vinyl paint on canvas, 52 x 81-1/4" (132 x 206 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Va de l'avant,
1964
March 1964, vinyl paint on canvas, 76-3/4" × 51-1/4" (194.9 cm × 130.2 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Table A La Bouteille
September 1970, epoxy paint on polyurethane, 38" × 20" × 45" (96.5 cm × 50.8 cm × 114.3 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Le Livre Ouvert,
1965
1965, vinyl paint on canvas, 51-1/4" × 63-3/4" (130 cm × 162 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Solario (portrait),
1967
March 1, 1967, vinyl paint on canvas, 39-1/2" × 32" (100 cm × 81 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Composition avec Cinq Personnages,
1965
April, 1965, ceramic, 78-3/4" × 47-1/4" (200 cm × 120 cm)
Jean Dubuffet,
Le Porteur d'Horloge,
1965
April, 1965, ceramic, 63" × 31-1/2" (160 cm × 80 cm)

"Writers have referred to the artificiality of Dubuffet's universe, but, in fact, it is the reverse. It is its realness, its actuality, that is most striking."

Milly Glimcher

 
Cover of The Hourloupe Cycle by Jean Dubuffet
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Jean Dubuffet

The Hourloupe Cycle

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EXHIBITION DETAILS

Jean Dubuffet
The Hourloupe Cycle
Mar 13 – Apr 26, 2025

GALLERY

540 West 25th Street
New York