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Zofia Kulik (born 1947 in
Wrocław Wrocław (; german: Breslau, or . ; Silesian German: ''Brassel'') is a city in southwestern Poland and the largest city in the historical region of Silesia. It lies on the banks of the River Oder in the Silesian Lowlands of Central Europe, rou ...
, Poland) is a Polish artist living and working in
Łomianki Łomianki is a town in Warsaw West County, Masovian Voivodeship, Poland. It had a population of 16,374 in 2008, and 24,328 in 2016. It is part of the Warsaw metropolitan area. It was the site of the Battle of Łomianki between Polish and German ...
(Warsaw), whose art combines political criticism with a feminist perspective.


Career

Kulik studied at the Sculpture Department of the
Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw ( pl, Akademia Sztuk Pięknych w Warszawie) is a public university of visual arts and applied arts located in the Polish capital. The Academy traces its history back to the Department of Arts founded at the Warsaw ...
from 1965 to 1971. Her diploma was realized in many stages and consisted of several parts: one of its elements was a theoretical thesis, later titled ''Film as Sculpture, Sculpture as Film'', in which the artist put forward a series of considerations regarding 'extended' sculpture. After her graduation, she started working with Przemysław Kwiek (born 1945) by forming the artistic duo KwieKulik. The project lasted from 1971 to 1987, which was also the time of their partnership. They carried out performances, interventions and artistic demonstrations, as well as creating objects, films and photographs. Their art was highly political and as a response to the rejection of their ideas from both the regime and the Polish neo avant-garde, the duo set up an independent gallery called the ''Studio of Activities, Documentation and Propagation'' (''PDDiU'') in their private apartment in Warsaw. In the frame of PDDiU they created an archive of Polish Art from the 1970s/80s, organized lectures and exhibitions. The duo was influenced by the concept of the Open Form introduced by their professor Oskar Hansen (1922-2005): considering the documentation of the process of the production of a work to be more important than the finished work itself.'
"We believed in the possibility of smooth cooperation with other artists, in the possibility of collective work, free from the problem of authorship, from worries over ‘what is whose’ and ‘who did what’. An artist should be free and unselfish, and the ‘new’ should be generated at the meeting point of me-and-others, in interaction”. - Zofia Kulik
Towards the end of the 1980s, the partners’ path parted in life and art alike. Since 1987, Kulik changed the direction of her interest: "I am fascinated by the Closed Form. I wish to be in a museum" – she declared. She moved towards her avant-garde concept of building an archive – a revolutionary approach that tackles archiving as an essential artistic practice. That was when Kulik began to create monumental, black and white, photographic compositions resulting from the process of multiple exposures of manifold negatives from the artist's archive of images. Kulik's photo collages adopted a variety of forms: from photo-carpets to columns, gates, medals, mandalas, to open-ended compositions, such as ''From Siberia to Cyberia''. Thematically, she focuses on the relationship men and women, the individual and the mass, as well as on symbols of power and totalitarianism. Following the continuum of recurring signs and gestures, a further pivotal part of her work is the phenomenon of mass-media, and its influence on consumers. Her works have been introduced to a wider audience at the documenta 12 in Kassel (2007) and at the
47th Venice Biennale The 47th Venice Biennale, held in 1997, was an exhibition of international contemporary art, with 59 participating nations. The Venice Biennale takes place biennially in Venice, Italy. Prizewinners of the 47th Biennale included: Agnes Martin an ...
(1997) and Museum Bochum (2005). Being part of renowned international collections such as
Tate Modern Tate Modern is an art gallery located in London. It houses the United Kingdom's national collection of international modern and contemporary art, and forms part of the Tate group together with Tate Britain, Tate Liverpool and Tate St Ives. It ...
, MoMA NY,
Centre Pompidou The Centre Pompidou (), more fully the Centre national d'art et de culture Georges-Pompidou ( en, National Georges Pompidou Centre of Art and Culture), also known as the Pompidou Centre in English, is a complex building in the Beaubourg area of ...
,
Moderna Museet Moderna Museet ("the Museum of Modern Art"), Stockholm, Sweden, is a state museum for modern and contemporary art located on the island of Skeppsholmen in central Stockholm, opened in 1958. In 2009, the museum opened a new branch in Malmö i ...
, and Stedelijk Museum, her work became part of the reopened permanent exhibition at the MoMA NY.


Selected works


''Film as Sculpture, Sculpture as Film,'' 1971

In her graduation diploma ''"Film as Sculpture, Sculpture as Film''", Kulik shifted her interest from the material, static sculpture-object to an analysis of the dynamic spectator-object relationship. She put forward a series of considerations regarding 'extended' sculpture addressing a question how sculpture 'comes into being' through the experience of the viewer. Her theory assumed that a sculpture is a process in time, with no precise beginning or end, with no concrete narrative or history. For this reason, instead of sculpture, her method was to choose photo sequences taken whilst working on materials, models' bodies, and found objects. Kulik's graduation exhibition at the Fine Arts Academy was titled ''Instead of Sculpture''. It was a three-channel slide installation composed of approximately 450 photographs which document Kulik's activity in her studio as well as the activity of other students around the school. The artist sees the photos as a visual diary, saying "the parallel projection gave an image of three interwoven threads. In the plastic thread: material and spatial transformations, in the life thread: occurrences in time and space and among people from the nearest circle, in the record thread: operations on the slides – the medium of the message." After the end of her collaboration with Przemysław Kwiek, Zofia Kulik started to create large photographs. The self-portraits came as a manifestation of an awakening of self-identity. Along with this self-justification followed the ornament which served as a way for Kulik to unravel a vision of history, politics and art as a continuum of recurring signs and gestures linked to an individual experience. Materialised in an archive of images, Kulik implemented about 700 photographs of a naked male model, presented on a black background, striking poses of symbolic gestures taken from ancient Greek vases, catholic iconography as well as Stalinist memorials. ''Archive of Gestures'' (1987–91) had been incorporated into an extensive collection, created by Kulik from the very beginning of her artistic practice and used as a source for projects. Her pieces are produced as photo montages, using multiple exposures of negatives on photo paper through precisely made stencils. In this way, one work can consist of hundreds single images.


''All the Missiles Are One Missile,'' 1991, 300 x 850 cm

The work ''All the Missiles Are One Missile'' resembles an ornate "Oriental" carpet, but with a reeling, kaleidoscopic look, also connecting with images and designs in illuminated medieval manuscripts and hints at cathedrals. It is divided into two apparently symmetrical parts resembling church elevations, yet the contents of the left and the right side are not entirely identical: The left wing is devoted to a woman, showing a monument called ''The Country Our Mother'' from
Saint Petersburg Saint Petersburg ( rus, links=no, Санкт-Петербург, a=Ru-Sankt Peterburg Leningrad Petrograd Piter.ogg, r=Sankt-Peterburg, p=ˈsankt pʲɪtʲɪrˈburk), formerly known as Petrograd (1914–1924) and later Leningrad (1924–1991), i ...
in the middle of the rosette, a reproduction of Szyndler’s painting ''Eve'' (1902) featuring a timid-looking girl, as well as TV screen frames showing rows of women, such as dancing girls, girls in the Miss America Competition or Chinese girls singing in the name of Mao. The right wing is devoted to a man, showing a monument called '' "Back and Front'' from
Magnitogorsk Magnitogorsk ( rus, Магнитого́рск, p=məɡnʲɪtɐˈɡorsk, ) is an industrial city in Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia, located on the eastern side of the extreme southern extent of the Ural Mountains by the Ural River. Its population ...
(symbol city of industrial power of the USSR), the multiplied nude figure of a man holding a drapery triumphantly over his head, as well as rows of TV screen frames showing soldiers from all over the world. More TV frames can be seen at the top and the bottom of the work, where grey stripes depict an execution in 1941 from a documentary called ''The Russia We Lost'' shown by Moscow’s television in 1993. The title of Kulik's work is a paraphrase of
T.S. Eliot Thomas Stearns Eliot (26 September 18884 January 1965) was a poet, essayist, publisher, playwright, literary critic and editor.Bush, Ronald. "T. S. Eliot's Life and Career", in John A Garraty and Mark C. Carnes (eds), ''American National B ...
’s words "...all the women are one woman", coming from his commentary to ''The Waste Land, Part III. The Fire Sermon''.


''Splendid of Myself''

In the self-portrait ''Splendour of Myself'' Zofia Kulik presents herself as a queen, evoking historical associations to the official portrait of Queen Elisabeth I and thus establishing a sense of female power. The sumptuous, ornamented robe she dresses herself in consists of many black-and-white and multiple exposure photographs of her male model and artist friend
Zbigniew Libera Zbigniew Libera (born 7 July 1959) is a Polish artist, born in Pabianice, Poland. Libera's artworks are considered to fall under the styles of pop art and Critical Art Ensemble, critical art, and have been frequently used his works to comment on ...
. By turning the images of the naked model into her garment and arranging them in such a miniature, geometrical and abstract way, Kulik subordinates the male, which even increases the notion of female authority. As splendid as her dress appears to be, the crown and royal attributes Kulik decorates herself with are made of lettuce leaves, a cucumber and a dandelion – objects of a rural, daily life. The artist thus creates a clash between rich and poor, the home and the state.
„In a sense it is easy, banal and kitschy. The subtlety of this work relies on its complexity. I feel that a great value of my work is the fact that I´m a talented organizer of compound visual structures. In turn all of the details are simple, like in a common song about love, death etc. My whole work is based on the fact that I permanently collect and archive the images of this world. The complexity of this work comes from the richness of the archive that I possess.” - Zofia Kulik (1998)


''From Siberia to Cyberia,'' 1998–2004, 240 x 2100 cm

''From Siberia to Cyberia'' is a monumental photo-mural which returns to the "fluid", open-end form, amenable to being continuously expanded in horizontal sequence. The monumental grid of identical small black and white frames is made of screen shots of the artist’s TV set, arranged chronologically starting in 1978 and ending in 2004. They are arranged in panels that, when seen from a distance, reveal a pattern of empty frames in zigzag, accentuating the flow of the sequences: The dynamic of the horizontal zigzag is reminiscent of Constantin Brâncuși's vertical '' Endless Column''. Apparently it's a "vibrating visual mass" of undifferentiated small pictures, which lost their specific content in order to become building blocks in an endless carpet – but on a closer inspection, it is possible to view every single photo clearly, revealing a complex web of parallel stories. The mural can be seen as a visual book of a televised reality.


Further reading

* Kulik-KwieKulik Foundation websit

* Katarzyna Kosmala, ''What it Feels Like to Be A Professional Artist in Central and Eastern Europe? Individualised Realty of the Other in Zofia Kulik’s Arts'', in ''International Journal of Knowledge, Culture and Change Management'', Vol.5, Iss.3, 2005, pp. 107–116 accessed a

17 Feb 2007
Lukasz Ronduda, ''The Films of Polish Women Artists in the 1970s and 1980s - From the Archive of Polish Experimental Film'', Art Margins (2004)


Izabela Kowlaczyk, ''Feminist Art in Poland Today'', in ''n. paradoxa'' magazine, Issue No.11, 1999] * *


Notes and references


External links


Kulik-KwieKulik Foundation website

Bio details, culture.pl website
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kulik, Zofia Polish contemporary artists Living people 1947 births