Andrzej Wróblewski

Andrzej Wróblewski
Avoiding Intermediary States. Hrsg.: Adam Mickiewicz Institute
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Artikel-Nr:
9783775737968
Veröffentl:
2014
Seiten:
752
Autor:
Lukasz Paluch
Gewicht:
3412 g
Format:
286x227x61 mm
Sprache:
Englisch,Polnisch
Beschreibung:

Andrzej Wróblewski (1927-1957) was one of the most unusual artists of the twentieth century. In only a single decade-he died prematurely at the age of thirty-he created an oeuvre in which one can perceive the élan of an aesthetic revolutionary and brilliant, multifaceted person whose ideas were always permeated by the will to political and social creativity. The Polish artist was interested in the existence of the individual inside the socialist regimes of Eastern Europe before and during World War II. In a way that was at first abstract, then increasingly concrete, and finally subjective, he depicted the decay of the human body and soul. This volume is a collection of sources and the result of a three-year research program; it offers an examination of the artist as a theorist, a regular visitor and critic of exhibitions, and a commentator on the art and cultural life of his time, while introducing him to a broader public.
Der Mensch, seine Masken sowie sozialen und kulturellen Codes in den erstaunlichen Ölgemälden, Gouachen, Papierarbeiten und Holzschnitten des polnischen Künstlers
Andrzej Wróblewski (1927-1957) was one of the most unusual artists of the twentieth century. In only a single decade-he died prematurely at the age of thirty-he created an oeuvre in which one can perceive the élan of an aesthetic revolutionary and brilliant, multifaceted person whose ideas were always permeated by the will to political and social creativity. The Polish artist was interested in the existence of the individual inside the socialist regimes of Eastern Europe before and during World War II. In a way that was at first abstract, then increasingly concrete, and finally subjective, he depicted the decay of the human body and soul. This volume is a collection of sources and the result of a three-year research program; it offers an examination of the artist as a theorist, a regular visitor and critic of exhibitions, and a commentator on the art and cultural life of his time, while introducing him to a broader public.

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