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This former bridge and pavement engineer, who became an “inventor,” fascinated all the scientists he met. He relentlessly sought to awaken consciences by overstepping the bounds of reason. The plans of his inventions, which he addressed to the highest scientific bodies, such as NASA, the CNRS or the Nobel Committee, are all invitations to reconsider the possibilities of physics, giving us the codes of an elsewhere.

Historians of twentieth-century science have not recorded the name of Jean Perdrizet (1907-1975) for posterity.

Perdrizet was originally a deputy civil engineer with the Bridges and Highways department before mental health issues forced him out of his career. He proved a fascinating figure for the many speculative thinkers and scientists he met, describing himself as an inventor and tirelessly striving to awaken human consciousness. Like all great thinkers, he did so by exploring beyond the limits laid down by fields of research.

Just as he would tell the CNRS researcher José Argémi, with whom he maintained a rich correspondence: “The taste for the marvelous rouses the same neurons in our brain, whether it be science or religions, but this marvelous is a hodgepodge, not necessarily a source of precision, but an encouragement to search for this precision.”

Perdrizet worked with subtle shifts of reality, transgressing primary utilitarian functionality and living in a mental realm devoted to his blind mother and the bachelor machines he tasked with enchanting the world. In many ways, his work is reminiscent of Camille Flammarion for the way it reaches beyond the earthly realm, Raymond Roussel, for embracing the poetry of machinery, and Marcel Duchamp for exploring the aesthetics of movement. He submitted his designs to leading scientific institutions such as NASA, the French National Centre for Scientific Research, and the Nobel Prize committee, each invention an invitation to rethink the limits of physics by providing the code to another world. Inventions such as the “Selenite Adam robots” – humanity’s ambassadors to the cosmos – and his “machines for communicating with ghosts” and “sidereal esperanto”, designed to facilitate communication with extra-terrestrials, all proclaimed the abolition of death. Perdrizet died in 1975, three days after his mother.

We had already devoted the first and only gallery exhibition to him in 2012, but the discovery of this exceptional group of over 40 works is a veritable event, as much for their extreme rareness as because they help to better our understanding of this wonderful inventor working at the limits of science, the occult and linguistics.

exhibition view of *jean perdrizet : deus ex machina #2*, christian berst art brut, paris, 2018. - © christian berst art brut, christian berst — art brut
exhibition view of *jean perdrizet : deus ex machina #2*, christian berst art brut, paris, 2018. - © christian berst art brut, christian berst — art brut
exhibition view of *jean perdrizet : deus ex machina #2*, christian berst art brut, paris, 2018. - © christian berst art brut, christian berst — art brut
Artworks
Please contact us to inquire about the available works.
Jean Perdrizet untitled (machine à calculer toute électrique), 1970
28.74 x 21.26 in
Jean Perdrizet untitled (soucoupe volante centrifuge), 1972
36.22 x 21.65 in
Jean Perdrizet untitled (table spirite télégraphique), 1972
25.59 x 19.69 in
Artist
Jean Perdrizet
Jean Perdrizet - © christian berst — art brut

This former bridge and pavement engineer, who became an “inventor,” fascinated all the scientists he met. He relentlessly sought to awaken consciences by overstepping the bounds of reason. The plans of his inventions, which he addressed to the highest scientific bodies, such as NASA, the CNRS or the Nobel Committee, are all invitations to reconsider the possibilities of physics, giving us the codes of an elsewhere. The one to whom we have dedicated an important monograph is present today in eminent collections : Mnan-Pompidou Center (France), collection de l’art brut (Swiss), LaM (France), Pinacothèque Hervé Lancelin (Luxembourg) ou Antoine de Galbert (France).

Catalog
Jean Perdrizet deus ex machina #2
Catalogue published to mark the exhibition *Jean Perdrizet : deus ex machina #2*, christian berst art brut, Paris, 2019. - © christian berst — art brut

Preface : Jean-Gaël Barbara, Manuel Anceau, José Argémi, Marc Décimo
Foreword : Christian Berst
Catalog published to mark the exhibition Jean Perdrizet : deus ex machina #2, from june 7th to july 13th, 2018.

Press review
jean perdrizet
La Rédaction, Wall Street International. June 19, 2018.
Video
Jean Perdrizet : science merveilleux et confiture
Language French
jean perdrizet

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