Life
Gargulinska was born into a family of old Polish nobility fromGargulinska's work
Stylistically a romantic expressionist, Gargulinska's work interchanges the abstract and figurative in unpredictable, powerful combinations. Gargulinska's paintings often include subjects from Greek mythology where the dramatic portrayal of human emotions expresses her creative imagination at its best.Red in Drama, Myth and Miracle
:Royal National Theatre, 2010 "The inverse of Horace's 'ut pictura poesis', here we have painting like poetry, the poetry of W B Yeats or Ezra Pound, for instance. Indeed one might say that Ewa Gargulinska has brought the poetry back into painting. Poetry is a free association of ideas and images within a loose, but not altogether disconnected, framework. Gargulinska's framework is classical mythology, the sculpture representing it, and modern psychology. These two are not entirely alien to each other, as Freud has shown. Of particular interest is that images emerge out of the paint, as it were, and rarely reach anything like naturalism. This is truly painterly poetry, the most fascinating aspect of which is the emerging mirror-image." These works, rendered in a variety of reds, from subtle orange to deep Alizarin and brown Madders are drawn from the subjects of mythology and drama. Gargulinska's powerful use of colour and form symbolically represents the tragic and timeless history of human relationships.Mysteries
:Royal National Theatre, 2004 The Irish poet Seamus Heaney, with his Polish friend Stanislaw Baranczak recently translated a book of ‘Laments’ by the Renaissance Polish poet Jan Kochanowski. These beautiful, passionate outpourings of grief on the death of his two-year-old daughter are a perfect expression of that Polish intensity of feeling which surfaces in Ewa Gargulinska's dark, brooding paintings. Her consistent colour range of deep blue, red, purple, offset by occasional outbursts of acid yellow, explores a world of melancholy and sorrow, the ‘haunts of pain’ of the poets mourning. But the active surface of the paintings nevertheless bespeaks the living rather than the dead. The compassionate presence of the guardian spirit wards off ‘the eternal iron slumbers’ of despair, by the power of art ‘to purge our human thought of all its dread’, ‘where angels dwell beyond distress and fear.’ Dorothy Walker, Irish Independent, 1996 The dream like mood of her dark painting form this era brings to mind the Romantic Movement in art of 1800 with its surreal mysticism, reflection upon life, death and the unconscious. The poetic expression of the artist's inner world collides and fuses with reality, thus it represents the duality of existence by contrast of the abstract and figurative forms of expression. “I use metaphors and mythology to express emotional, spiritual and metaphysical states of mind, relating to my experiences of life's mysteries. I draw images from both my imagination and collective symbolism, pondering how spirit animates matter and how it leaves the body.”The Dilemma of Three
:Beijing Exhibition, 2010 Gargulinska focuses on the complexity and dynamic of three; creating figurative yet elusive forms of intermingled heads or faces, each portraying a different emotional state, nature and tension. All three are interdependent but connected, some faces dissolve into one another, overlapping in an immaterial or static space. The range of colour is subdued and subtle. Gargulinska uses muted yellows, brown-greens, and grey-blues in many translucent layers. The paintings in this series reflect upon the experience of the individual, the selves one carries within or the drama shared by three personas. “During my life and career as an exhibiting artist I have changed my modes of expression many times from figurative to abstract, from dark, obscure, ephemeral, reflective painting to passionate free manifestations of form, colour, and texture. The latter has become my life time search and my forte. The impulse to represent beauty in physical and metaphysical aspects renders my paintings with an almost classical perfection, followed by periods of complete liberation from its restraints. Ultimately two modes of expression: the abstract and figurative appear in the same painting, which I explore to this day. I am always anticipating the birth of something unexpected, a new road to harmony, hopefully on the path of Titian.”Collections
Public Collections
* National Museum, Kraków * Madame Tussauds Museum, London * National Museum of Women in the Arts Archives, Washington DC * National Gallery Zacheta Archives, Warsaw * Copernicus University Archives, Torun * Academy of Fine Arts Archives, WarsawPrivate Collections
* Arthur M Sackler Collections, New York City * Sir Michael Scott, Ireland * Jeremy Irons, England * Cyril Cusack, Ireland * Vernon Ellis, Chairman of the English National Opera, London * Lionel de Rothschild, EnglandExhibitions
* 1966 — Young Talents, Foksal Gallery, Warsaw * 1971 — ICA Group exhibition, London * 1972 — Project Arts Centre, Dublin * 1976 — Caldwell Gallery, Dublin * 1976 — Polish Cultural Institute, London * 1981 — Jablonski Gallery, London * 1989 — Central College of Art, London * 1989 — International Exhibition of Women Painters, Paris * 1991 — Piano Nobile Gallery, Kraków * 1992 — Polish Artists Association, London * 1994 — Polish Cultural Institute, London * 1995 — Dillon Gallery, London * 1995 — Flaminia 58, Rome * 1995 — Polish Cultural Institute, Rome * 1996 — Polish Cultural Institute, Stockholm * 1997 — Groucho Club, London * 1998 — Soho House, London * 1999 — Royal National Theatre, London * 2003 — Hutson Gallery, London * 2003 — Rue de Phalsbourg, Paris * 2004 — Royal National Theatre, London * 2006 — Traffic Gallery, Warsaw * 2008 — Museo de la Cultura Maya, Mexico * 2010 — Embassy House, Beijing * 2010 — Oxford University, Oxford * 2010 — Polish Embassy, BeijingCommissions
* Dr Arthur M Sackler, New York * International Medical Syndicate, New York * Gate Theatre, Dublin — Set design and poster * Sybil Connolly exhibition, New York and Chicago — Textile design * Peter Luke's “Paquito”, Dublin — Illustrations and book design * Irish Posts and Telegraphs, Dublin — Irish Christmas stamp design * International Congress of the Society of Industrial Design, Dublin — Exhibition Design * Abbey Theatre, Dublin — Poster design * Dublin Theatre Festival — Set design/poster * Madame Tussauds, London — Poster designPublications
* Studio International, London 1984 * Print, New York 1983References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gargulinska, Ewa 1941 births Living people Artists from Kraków 20th-century Polish painters 21st-century Polish painters Polish women painters Expressionist painters Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw alumni 20th-century Polish women