Salon des Refusés

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

French Salon des Refusés

Proper noun edit

 
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Salon des Refusés

  1. (historical) An exhibition held in Paris from 1863 to 1886, showing works that had been rejected by the Académie des Beaux-Arts when submitted for display at the Paris Salon.

Noun edit

Salon des Refusés (plural Salons des Refusés)

  1. A gallery for outsider art or art rejected from mainstream galleries.
    • 1985, Serge Guilbaut, How New York Stole the Idea of Modern Art, page 69:
      The press reported rumors that a salon des refuses was in the works.
    • 1999, Jay Ruby, The World of Francis Cooper: Nineteenth-Century Pennsylvania Photographer, page 84:
      By the time American photographic pictorialists became interested in organizing their first salon, European painters and sculptors had been organizing salons des refuses in protest against the official salons of Paris for more than forty years.
    • 2011 June 15, Jonathan Jones, “BP Portrait award unlocks our passion for painting”, in The Guardian[1]:
      Fifty-five paintings are a lot, and yet this year, for the first time, there is also an alternative show, a salon des refusés, set up by artists who did not make the final cut.
    • 2012, Daniel Cottom, Why Education is Useless, page 94:
      One result of this question was Dubuffet's decision, in 1951, to create a Salon des refusés for his Salon des refusés: an “Annex” to his art brut collection to which he relegated certain items, made by children, amateur painters, and others, that he no longer thought deserved to be shown on an equal footing with art brut proper.

French edit

Etymology edit

Literally, Room of the Refused (Works).

Proper noun edit

Salon des Refusés ?

  1. Salon des Refusés