Mária Bartuszová
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Mária Bartuszová (1936–1996) was a Slovakian sculptor known for her abstract white plaster sculptures. Her work is included in the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the Slovak National Gallery in Bratislava and the
Tate Tate is an institution that houses, in a network of four art galleries, the United Kingdom's national collection of British art, and international modern and contemporary art. It is not a government institution, but its main sponsor is the U ...
in London. Her artwork is part of curated selection of Venice Biennale titled "Milk of Dreams", Arsenale Area (April - November 2022)


Biography

Mária Bartuszová was born on 24 April 1936 in
Prague Prague ( ; cs, Praha ; german: Prag, ; la, Praga) is the capital and largest city in the Czech Republic, and the historical capital of Bohemia. On the Vltava river, Prague is home to about 1.3 million people. The city has a temperate ...
, Czech Republic. From 1951 through 1955 she studied at the Higher School of Applied Arts in Prague. She went on to study at the Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in Prague from 1956 through 1961. After her graduation she moved from Prague to
Košice Košice ( , ; german: Kaschau ; hu, Kassa ; pl, Коszyce) is the largest city in eastern Slovakia. It is situated on the river Hornád at the eastern reaches of the Slovak Ore Mountains, near the border with Hungary. With a population of app ...
, Slovakia with her husband, sculptor Juraj Bartusz. In 1966 Bartuszová was included in the ''Exhibition of the Young'' at the House of Arts in
Brno Brno ( , ; german: Brünn ) is a city in the South Moravian Region of the Czech Republic. Located at the confluence of the Svitava and Svratka rivers, Brno has about 380,000 inhabitants, making it the second-largest city in the Czech Republic ...
, Czech Republic, her first recorded exhibit. She was a member of the Concretists' Club (''Klub konkrétistů''), a Concrete art organization. She exhibited her art throughout her life time, mostly in Slovakia and the Czech Republic. Bartuszová died on 22 December 1996 in Košice. Her artwork is included in the Centre Pompidou in Paris and the Slovak National Gallery in Bratislava. Her work is also in the collection of the
Tate Tate is an institution that houses, in a network of four art galleries, the United Kingdom's national collection of British art, and international modern and contemporary art. It is not a government institution, but its main sponsor is the U ...
in London and was scheduled to be shown in a solo retrospective there in 2020. Due to COVID pandemic restriction was postponed to September 2022 - April 2023. Opening week of her monograph exhibition entitled "Maria Bartuszová" at TATE Modern Gallery in London 20th Sept. 2022, was accompanied with large press attention. "''Her unique biomorphic casts touch on big themes such as belonging, growth and infinity. Bartuszová worked outside the traditional centres of contemporary art, yet her pieces are far from marginal. A retrospective at Tate Modern will offer a comprehensive take on her vision and resourcefulness,'
Guardian wrote


Characteristics of her artworks

While Bartuszová remains a relatively unknown Slovak sculptor, her artwork was presented to the general public during ''
documenta ''documenta'' is an exhibition of contemporary art which takes place every five years in Kassel, Germany. The ''documenta'' was founded by artist, teacher and curator Arnold Bode in 1955 as part of the Bundesgartenschau (Federal Horticultura ...
'' in
Kassel Kassel (; in Germany, spelled Cassel until 1926) is a city on the Fulda River in northern Hesse, Germany. It is the administrative seat of the Regierungsbezirk Kassel and the district of the same name and had 201,048 inhabitants in December 2020 ...
in 2007 (curated by
Roger M. Buergel Roger M. Buergel (born 1962) is a writer and curator. He was born in Berlin (West). Buergel received his education at the Institute of Contemporary Art (under Johannes Gachnang) at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna and subsequently worked as private ...
,
Ruth Noack Ruth Noack (born 12 January 1964) is a German curator and art historian. Noack and Roger M. Buergel, co-curated documenta 12 in Kassel, Germany (16 June - 23 September 2007). In 2019, it was announced that Noack would become the founding exe ...
). Following this, her works appeared occasionally in international exhibitions with some becoming part of prestigious collections of contemporary art. Her artworks have been exhibited individually, without a broader context and with no reference to the broader dynamics within her practice. Bartuszová's important exhibitions are: ''Path to the Organic Sculpture'' (2005, Slovak National Gallery) and ''Mária Bartuszová: Provisional Forms'' (2014-2015,
Museum of Modern Art, Warsaw Muzeum Sztuki Nowoczesnej w Warszawie is a museum in Warsaw, Poland. It was established in 2005. Until the construction of its new museum, the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw carries out its program activities in a temporary premises Museum at Pa ...
). A majority of her sculptures are made of
plaster Plaster is a building material used for the protective or decorative coating of walls and ceilings and for Molding (decorative), moulding and casting decorative elements. In English, "plaster" usually means a material used for the interiors of ...
, a material that is preparatory and impermanent by nature. For this reason her sculptures are, by design, tentative, unfinished and transitory. On occasion, when "Bartuszová succumbed to the temptations of using aluminium or bronze, she would immediately undermine their material weight, through either form or subject matter: softening the material, putting it in motion, altering its proportions, and mocking gravity." Her artworks in the second half of the 1960s were influenced by her individual vision of constructive geometric tendencies connected with new materials such as cut aluminium. In 1976 and 1983, together with art historian G. Kladek, she ran workshops for disabled and visually impaired children. She created sculptures that enabled those unable to see to get to know various forms and textures, to differentiate between geometric and organic forms, to recognise their emotional significance, and to develop an alternative usage of art, with an emphasis on the haptic characteristics of sculpture. From the 1980s, her work was dominated by pure, ovoid forms, such as hollowed eggs and shells, and idealized shapes that had been subjected to deformation – crushing, squeezing, breaking, and tying, such as oval forms of fragile plaster matter, constrained with string, and sometimes weighted with small stones. In her works produced after the mid-1980s, Bartuszová began to employ a singular method of obtaining plaster casts by means of a signature technique, called "pneumatic shaping".


Public collections

* Slovak National Gallery in Bratislava, Slovak Republic * East Slovak Gallery, Košice, Slovak Republic * Tate Gallery, London * Muzeum Sztuki Nowoczesnej w Warszawie / Museum of Modern Art Warszava, Poland * Centre Pompidou / Museé d´ Art Moderne, Paris, France * Kontakt. The Art Collection of Erste Group and Erste Foundation, Vienna, Austria * The First Slovak Investment Group's Collection (PSIS), Slovakia * Pinault Collection, Venice, Italy * Goetz Collection, Munchen, Germany * Museum Susch, Switzerland * ISelf Collection, United Kingdom * Prokesz Family Collection, Poland


Bibliography

* Bažantová, Viera – Kvasnička, Marián. ''Mária Bartuszová''. Trenčín : M. A. Bazovský Gallery, 1983 * Beskid, Vladimír. ''Mária Bartuszová - Cesta k organickej plastike'' / ''The Path to Organic Sculpture'' (1962-1966): Bratislava: Slovak National Gallery, 2005. . * Dziewańska, Marta (ed.). ''Provisional Forms''. Warszaw : Museum of Modern Art in Warszaw, 2015. . (including essays by Gabriela Garlatyová, Martina Pachmanová, Anke Kempes, Agata Jakubowska, Briony Fer, Claudia Calirman, Christine Macel, Amanda Sarroff) * Garlatyová, Gabriela. ''Lives of the Artists: Maria Bartuszová''. In. Tate Etc., Issue 40 — Summer 2017, Publisher Tate Gallery, London. * ''Mária Bartuszová - Sculpture Works 1:1962/1987'': exhibition catalogue: Exhibition Hall ZSVU Košice - January 1987. Košice: ZSVU, 1988. 63 s. * Bingham Juliet (ed.). ''Maria Bartuszová''. London : Tate Publishing, 2022. Hardcover, 192 p. . (including texts by Frances Morris, Juliet Bingham, Gabriela Garlatyová)


References


Further reading

* Dziewańska, Marta (ed.). ''Provisional Forms''. Warszaw : Museum of Modern Art in Warszaw, 2015. . (including essays by Gabriela Garlatyová, Martina Pachmanová, Anke Kempes, Agata Jakubowska, Briony Fer, Claudia Calirman, Christine Macel, Amanda Sarroff
Maria Bartuszová. Provisional Forms


External links

*

Images at TATE Gallery London

Maria Bartuszová: an artist of the fragile who was anything but, Review by Guardian

Maria Bartuszová review – a world of misshapen planets and alien art forms, Review by Guardian

Maria Bartuszova review — this Tate retrospective is inspiring, Review by The Times

Maria Bartuszová at Tate Modern review: Portrays the quiet magic of a remarkable sculptor, Review by Evening Standard

Do you understand Mária Bartuszová's art better than children do?, Review by Telegraph

Tate Modern opens Maria Bartuszová's first major UK exhibition, Review by FADE MAgazine {{DEFAULTSORT:Bartuszová, Mária 1936 births 1996 deaths 20th-century Czech women artists Artists from Prague Slovak women artists Slovak sculptors Slovak women sculptors 20th-century sculptors Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in Prague alumni