Philatelia.Net
RussianEnglish
Dmitry Karasyuk's author's project

Philatelia.Net / The literature / Plots /

The directory «Plots»

Czyzewski Titus
(1885–1945)

Polish painter, art theoretician; poet and playwright; member of the first Polish avant-garde group of the 1920s known as the Formists.

Czyzewski studied art from 1902-1907 at the Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow under Jozef Unierzyski, Jozef Mehoffer, and Leon Wyczolkowski. While in Paris between 1907 and 1909, he was strongly influenced by the work of Cézanne. Upon returning to Poland he found employment as a middle school art teacher. Krakow's Friends of the Fine Arts Society organized Czyzewski's first solo exhibition in 1910. The artist spent the years 1910-1912 in Paris learning the principles of Cubism. Between 1911 and 1913 he took part in a series of exhibitions of the "Independents" in Krakow, along with painters Andrzej Pronaszko and Zbigniew Pronaszko, Jacek Mierzejewski, and Eugeniusz Zak. These exhibits demonstrated the younger generation's split with the cultural heritage of the Young Poland movement. Czyzewski's early work was influenced by French Post-impressionism and the paintings of Cézanne in particular.

At the outbreak of World War I, the artist departed for Vienna. In 1915 he introduced an original modification on the concept of the traditional painting as a two-dimensional canvas, using wood and cardboard to create multi-dimensional paintings. In 1917 he joined the Polish Expressionists (renamed the Formists in 1919), a group that gave birth to the concept of the Polish avant-garde, and went on to participate in the Formists' exhibitions in Krakow, Warsaw, Lviv, and Poznan. Czyzewski also published poetry and plays, designing the publications himself ("Zielone Oko. Poezje formistyczne. Elektryczne wizje" / "Green Eye. Formist Poetry. Electric Visions", 1920; "Noc-dzien" / "Night-Day", 1922; "Waz, Orfeusz i Euridika" / "The Snake, Orpheus, and Euridice", 1922; "Osiol i slonce w metamorfozie" / "The Donkey and Sun in Metamorphosis", 1922). Jointly with Leon Chwistek and Karol Winkler, Czyzewski produced a magazine titled "Formisci" / "The Formists" and was a co-creator of the Krakow clubs Katarynka / Street Organ (1917) and Galka Muszkatolowa / Nutmeg (1918), both of which were Futurist in character. In 1922, following the dissolution of the Formists, Czyzewski departed for Paris, living in that city intermittently to 1930. During this time he exhibited his works at the Autumn Salon (1926, 1928), the Salon of Independents (1923, 1924, 1925, 1926) and the Tuileries Salon (1926, 1929). While in Paris he also published the poetry cycle Pastoralki / Pastorals (1925), illustrated with the woodcuts of Tadeusz Makowski, and a piece titled Robespierre - rapsod - Od romantyzmu do cynizmu / Robespierre - Rhapsody - From Romanticism to Cynicism. Czyzewski traveled extensively throughout this time, visiting southern France, Spain, and Italy. In 1927 he joined in an exhibition summarizing the achievements of the Formists at Warsaw's Society for the Encouragement of the Fine Arts. Upon returning to Poland, he shifted his focus to art criticism and exhibited actively, presenting his works at the salons of the Art Propaganda Institute and participating in the L'Art Vivant en Europe exhibit in Brussels (1931) and the International Art and Technology Exhibition in Paris (1937). His paintings were included in exhibitions of the New Generation Group in Lviv (1932) and the Modern Artists Group in Warsaw (1933). In 1934 he joined the editorial board of "Glos Plastykow" / "Artists' Voice", a magazine that promoted Colorism. In 1944 he moved to Krakow where he lived until his death one year later.

Czyzewski's original contribution to avant-garde art of the 1920s were his Cubist-inspired multi-dimensional paintings. These works underlined the autonomy of the artwork as something built on laws particular to it alone. They portrayed fragments of physical reality as seen simultaneously from various sides and distances. Highly expressive, the end compositions resembled a series of reflections thrown on a single plane by a prismatic array of mirrors.

Czyzewski often combined simplified, geometric shapes into surprising arrangements (Akt z kotem / Nude with Cat), creating unreal configurations of objects and figures evoking a strangeness akin to that of Surrealist images. These compositions demonstrated the artist's search for that which is primal and were an attempt to penetrate the sphere of instincts. Frequent motifs included fragments of musical instruments and staffs with notes; dancers were another musical accent. Czyzewski also drew on Polish folk art, portraying his subjects in a Primitivist manner and incorporating an abundance of simplified forms in his landscapes characterized by shallow perspective. His figures were at the same time lyrical, their facial features, expressive eyes, and the drapes in his compositions reminiscent of glass paintings.

His multi-dimensional paintings of the 1920s also took the form of shallow boxes filled with relief forms like cardboard spirals and twisted pieces of sheet metal. Czyzewski combined these with painterly ornaments and "naively" portrayed, highly expressive human figures. Essential to works dating from 1924-1925 is the way they caricatured folk art motifs. Czyzewski produced decoratively composed portraits styled after Primitive Art, intensifying the cheerful mood of these images with flowers, birds, and butterflies. Forms were treated superficially and surrounded with soft, fine contour lines. At the same time Czyzewski created paintings that referred directly to folk icons representing the Madonna and the Crucifixion. These works drew on the representational conventions of the art of Byzantium and the Italian Quattrocento.

His paintings from 1922-1930 reflect a fascination with Spanish art, particularly the exceptionally dramatic paintings of El Greco. Czyzewski was also strongly influenced by Spanish folk art, and selected works manifest the artist's propensity for pastiche, summarization, and the grotesque. Dark color tones, thus far dominant, gave way to bright colors and starkly contrasted tones.

Upon returning to Poland in 1930 Czyzewski aligned himself with the Kapists, who he first encountered in Paris in 1925. The still life became the main motif in his work; he gave his painterly substance a brilliance, saturating it with light, and used wavy, erratic lines to delineate forms. The paintings of this period reflect a deeply assimilated inspiration with the art of Cézanne and the French Fauvists. Clear contour lines link flat, independent areas of color, real objects are transformed into compact signs, and paramount importance is assigned to their mutual relations as depicted on the plane of the canvas. In his portraits, generalized representations of models melted into a background that vibrated with color (Portret Magdaleny Potworowskiej / Portrait of Magdalena Potworowska, 1935). At the same time, he limited the decorative approach in his landscapes, largely retaining real natural forms. In the 1930s and 1940s Czyzewski toned down his colors, simultaneously making them more luminous and opalescent.


Poland, 1992, Tytus Czyżewski

Advertising:

© 2003-2024 Dmitry Karasyuk. Idea, preparation, drawing up
Рейтинг ресурсов "УралWeb" Рейтинг@Mail.ru Rambler's Top100 liveinternet.ru: показано число просмотров за 24 часа, посетителей за 24 часа и за сегодня