June 27, 2012

August Walla, Dekoriertes Zimmer / Decorated room


August Walla's room in the Haus der Künstler 
(© Gugging Museum)

Initiated in the 1950s as a visual art workshop related to a psychiatric institution, the Art Brut Center Gugging near Vienna in Austria currently is an independent cultural organization that unites a museum/gallery, a conference unit, a restaurant, a shop and a residential home where artists with psychic problems can live and work, the Artists House (Haus der Künstler). This Artists House is registered as an institution for social care.

One of the well known Gugging artists is August Walla (1936-2001).

Life and works

Born in the small community of Klosterneuberg, near Gugging, August Walla soon lost his father. As a young boy with a weak condition he was teased by other children. He was diagnosed schizophrenic at age sixteen after he had tried to set the house afire. For some years he would stay in psychiatric custody.

Already as a youngster he expressed his creative talent by abundantly decorating found objects with insignia and making paintings on objects in public space.

In 1983, when almost 50, Walla was admitted to the Haus der Künstler where he stayed until his death. During his stay Walla would demonstrate a high productivity in many areas of art.

August Walla's room transformed into an art environment

One of Walla's creative activities was decorating walls with paintings, such as the house's exterior front wall, but also the walls of his room in the Artists House. A characteristic of his work is fear of emptiness, so the paintings on the walls and the ceiling of his room fit seamlessly together.

The room can be visited during special occasions, like expositions.

August Walla retrospective 2012

In 2012, from March 29 till October 28, the Gugging Museum had a major exhibition of August Walla's artistic work, with a life-size replica of Walla's decorated room.

Documentation
* Biography and pictures on the website of the Collection de l'Art Brut, Lausanne

August Walla
Decorated room
Art/brut center Gugging
Am Campus 3, 3400 Maria Gugging, Austria
visits only at special occasions

June 11, 2012

Isidre Castells, Catalunya en petit / Catalonia in miniature


pictures courtesy of Anna Fuster (Flickr, 2007)

The Carrer de Grau in the Sant Andreu quarter of Barcelona still has the atmosphere of past times, with its small houses and front gardens facing a street that has no car traffic.

The residents organize these gardens in various ways and one of them did this in a very special, creative manner. 

Life and works

Isidre Castells (1920-2005) at age seventeen was enlisted in the army to take part in the Spanish civil war. Struck by typhus, been imprisoned in a concentration camp and having lost his father and mother, his youth was troublesome and he had to find a way to face life after the war.

He got a job in a factory, worked in the weekends as a home painter, and settled in the Sant Andreu quarter of Barcelona. When in the 1980s the factory went bankrupt, Castells got an early retirement.

Not liking idly hanging around, he began working in the front garden, installing some concrete elements to curb the growth of weeds. This was the start, around 1985, of a project that he would continue for some twenty years.

With the format of big tiles in mind, Castells made two-dimensional replicas of well known architecture in Catalonia, like the Sagrada Familia and Montserrat.

All together, in the course of the years he has constructed some hundred representations of Catalonian monuments, churches, famous buildings, and so on.


Apart from the replicas on the wall, which give the site a museum-like character, the garden itself has been embellished with mosaic- and shell-decorated structures, like flowerpots, pillars and arcs.

People in Barcelona would be reminded of Gaudi.


Castells has been making sculptures too, one of these is a black, mosaic-decorated representation of his beloved dog, as in next picture. 


After Isidre Castells died in 2005, his widow Rosa Anglada, would maintain the garden and when she became to old (in 2018 she was at age 92) Josep Castells took care of the site, as reported in the journal El Periódico (see documentation)

Situation in 2021


The picture above, made in October 2021 by Tiramisu Bootfighter, who traveled through Spain in the context of his project La Valise, Galerie Ambulante, shows that the site at that time was still in good condition

Documentation
a website promoting the quarter of Sant Andreu has pictures of the garden and a text about Castells
* a series of photos (December 2013) by Raija Kallioinen on Facebook
* entry (November 2014) on Amaijak's weblog Mi Mundo, with a series of pictures
* article (January 2018) in local journal El Periódico

Video
* scenes of the site (2012) on the Barcelona trip video by Serflac (YouTube, starts at 19.46, cannot be embedded here)

first published June 2012, last revised October 2021

Isidre Castells
Catalunya en petit
56/58 Carrer de Grau
Sant Andreu, 
Barcelona, Catalunya, Spain
can be seen from the street
streetview