• Thoughts on the Polish Artistic Present – Slawomir Marzec

    Date posted: June 15, 2006 Author: jolanta

    Thoughts on the Polish Artistic Present

    Slawomir Marzec

     

    Tomasz Domanski, "Forest Movement accorging to Macbeth." Video, 2001; Image courtesy CRP Oronsko.

    Tomasz Domanski, “Forest Movement accorging to Macbeth.” Video, 2001; Image courtesy CRP Oronsko.

     

     

    The
    exhibition, "Sztuka II RP," in Oronsko, Poland presents a somewhat
    atypical view of Polish art from the 1990`s, and goes across ranking lists and
    "official" interpretations. One saw there the work of already
    well-known artists, like Z. Libera, G. Sztwiertnia, D. Lejman, but also some
    who are still waiting for our attention, like K. Pasterczak and D. Fodczuk. The
    curators, T. Ksiazek and J. S. Wojciechowski, selected about thirty artists
    from over a hundred who participated in seminars, workshops and shows of young
    artists in Oronsko from 1991-2000. These artists were given the opportunity to
    create by themselves (in cooperation with young critics) the public image of
    their generation. The workshops were particularly valuable in Poland in that
    time, when the art scene was predominated by meta/artists
    lang=EN-GB style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’> – curators who, adapted
    to the requirements of the market and the mass media, too often identified a
    fluency in the art world with artistic competence.

     

    The
    exhibition does not try to present a given state of art, but rather a moment of
    its becoming. So, one can observe how given artists have tried to get rid of
    both Great Narration (like J. Niegoda), and the fortuitousness and
    fragmentation of "anything goes" (S. Sobczak); and how they have
    balanced between self – reflection and social engagement, between a
    contemplative sensibility and the actual "duty" of irony and sarcasm.

     

    It
    would not be possible to define the generation as a whole, but we might dare to
    sketch some features. Their consciousness is being shaped in a time of radical
    civilizational transformation in Poland; a transformation, becoming… permanent.
    First of all, one sees the abandoning of conventional symbols. A new rank is
    being given to our common reality, which is not yet perceived as a staged
    moment or a final state. For many artists the commonplace has became a basic
    subject; they are testing it in many ways in hopes of revealing something
    "real". Their artworks derive from individual or intimate
    experiences. In the same moment, it is a search (or initiation) of a new (even
    temporal) community of thoughts and sensibilities. Looking at this exhibition
    (and others) I get the impression that we are slowly approaching the moment
    when the crush of changes in art will cause a loss of their validity.

     

    The
    perspective of several years is not final, but it makes clear already how time
    will be merciless to many artistic strategies. Works of art which have arisen
    in response to only one concrete problem, one given idea, medium or notion will
    likely be the worst affected. This is a real problem: by and large, progress
    today results from the secretion of smaller and smaller contexts; it privileges
    fragmented or isolated aspects of art. The "time test" will be more
    generous to purposely naive artworks which continue to challenge the obvious.
    Of course, purposeful naivete is not be confused with goofiness; for simplistic
    silliness alone will never be much consolation for lovers (like me) of
    polymorphic complexity.

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