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World War II – Drama, Symbol, Trauma
Artists: Ryszard Apte, Mirosław Bałka, Krzysztof M. Bednarski, Edward Dwurnik, Wojciech Fangor, Ewa Faryaszewska, Zbigniew Grzybowski, Eugeniusz Haneman, Władysław Hasior, Maria Hiszpańska-Neumann, Lukáš Houdek, Elżbieta Janicka, Maria Jarema, Jane Korman, Paweł Kowalewski, Sigalit Landau, Thomas Lange, Zbigniew Libera, Bronisław Linke, Zbigniew Łagocki, Stefan Mrożewski, Marek Oberländer, Zdzisław Pabisiak, Krystyna Piotrowska, Piotr Saul, Agata Siwek, Klaus Staeck, Jonasz Stern, Witold Stelmachniewicz, Władysław Strzemiński, Łukasz Surowiec, Józef Szajna, Alina Szapocznikow, Roman Tarkowski, Mieczysław Wątorski, Leon Wróblewski, Kazimierz Gustaw Zemła, Artur Żmijewski, Andrzej Żygadło
Curators:Maria Anna Potocka, Martyna Sobczyk
Co-ordinator:Mirosława Bałazy
Opening: 24 October 2019, 6 PM
Duration:25.10.2019–22.3.2020
Venue: building A, level 0
In preparing an exhibition about World War II, we had no ambition to chart its history but rather to focus on some threads that have had the greatest impact on the Polish consciousness.
We start off with the Portents of War, a theme with an important message. World War II made us realise to what extent people can turn a deaf ear to forewarnings. This lesson remains topical. The next theme is the Sonderaktion Krakau. Using this codename, on 6 November 1939 the Nazi occupants arrested over 180 professors from Krakow. They were taken to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp. The Nazis aimed to destroy the intellectual elite and moral beacons in order to facilitate the subjugation of the defeated nation. Anti-Semitic propaganda also played an important part in this ruthless brainwashing. Here the Nazi initiative fell on fertile ground. In the section of the exhibition entitled Anti-Semitism, we show slogans and posters that aimed to fuel anti-Jewish sentiment. The next topic is The Life in the Ghettos, depicting the most tragic predicament in the time of war, more dramatic even than incarceration in the concentration camp, since it is harder to witness – totally powerless – the suffering of one’s loved ones than being a victim oneself. An important thread in the exhibition is the Warsaw Uprising – a controversial feat of underground resistance, subject to continuing historic and emotional reinterpretation. Without a doubt, the most significant and from the ethical point of view topical theme is The Holocaust. This greatest failure of European values is still open to an analysis that would bring an effective forewarning for the future. The final part of the exhibition is The Artist as a Witness to the Drama.
In the parts dealing with history, artworks are accompanied by documents as well as propaganda and literary materials. In the exhibition we present 39 artists. Many of the works come from the MOCAK Collection. The section related to Sonderaktion Krakau was prepared in collaboration with the Jagiellonian University Museum and Archives.
Zbigniew Libera, KZL LEGO, 1996, photograph, 20 × 30 cm, MOCAK Collection
Sigalit Landau, Island of Shoes, 2015, sculpture, 80 × 200 × 200 cm, MOCAK Collection
Jonasz Stern, from the series Lvov Ghetto, 1947–1948, woodcut / paper, various dimensions, MOCAK Collection
Mirosław Bałka, Blue Gas Eyes, 2004, video installation, 3 min 37 s, MOCAK Collection
Witold Stelmachniewicz, untitled [after Riefenstahl], 2009–2016, oil / canvas, 90 × 120 ×2.5 cm, MOCAK Collection
Władysław Hasior, from the cycle The Red War,1950s, drawing, 29.7 × 42 cm, courtesy | The Tatra Museum
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