Skip to main content Skip to search results

Showing Records: 1 - 2 of 2

Sans Titre (priere a Marie) / Gallieni, Jill., 2012

 Item
Identifier: CC-62098-10004491
Scope and Contents Jill Galliéni was born in 1948 to an American mother and a French father, and has always lived in Paris. Her father was an actor. She was brought up by guardians until the age of seven, when her father took over her care. She began creating her strange fabric dolls at a very early age. She turned to prayer towards the age of thirty as a way of helping her to rebuild her life and free herself from the vicious mental traps that were stopping her from living her life to the full. She initially wanted to "speak" through the medium of words, but, finding it unbearable to see sentences written in her own hand, she invented sentences from prayers "“ always the same, repeated hundreds of times. These formed tightly bundled garlands so that the meaning of the prayer would remain a mystery. The prayers are addressed to Saint Rita, patron saint of lost causes, and refer to situations, people, her own circumstances, and so on. They feature imitations of the written word or superimposed layers...
Dates: 2012

Sans Titre (priere a Sainte Rita) / Gallieni, Jill., 1990

 Item
Identifier: CC-62177-10004523
Scope and Contents Jill Galliéni was born in 1948 to an American mother and a French father, and has always lived in Paris. Her father was an actor. She was brought up by guardians until the age of seven, when her father took over her care. She began creating her strange fabric dolls at a very early age. She turned to prayer towards the age of thirty as a way of helping her to rebuild her life and free herself from the vicious mental traps that were stopping her from living her life to the full. She initially wanted to "speak" through the medium of words, but, finding it unbearable to see sentences written in her own hand, she invented sentences from prayers "“ always the same, repeated hundreds of times. These formed tightly bundled garlands so that the meaning of the prayer would remain a mystery. The prayers are addressed to Saint Rita, patron saint of lost causes, and refer to situations, people, her own circumstances, and so on. They feature imitations of the written word or superimposed layers...
Dates: 1990

Filtered By

  • Subject: Outsider art X
  • Names: Galliéni, Jill, 1948- X

Filter Results