Dimensions: 45.5 x 16.5 x 14 cm
signed and dated: 'A.S. 67'
colored polyester resin, light bulb, electric wires, metal
Origin
private collection, Paris (gift from the artist)
Galerie Pact, Paris
Institutional collection, Poland (purchase from the above)
Exhibited
(probably) Alina Szapocznikow, Galerie Cogeime, Brussels, 12.11-3.12.1968
Literature
Une cuisine où l'on vit [in:] "Femme d'Aujourd'hui," no. 1328, 15.10.1970, p. 93 (ill.).
Jola Gola, Alina Szapocznikow. Catalog of Sculptures, National Museum in Cracow, Museum of Art in Lodz, 2001, cat. no. 340, p. 146.
compare:
Alina Szapocznikow. 1926-1973, exhibition catalog, Zachęta Gallery of Contemporary Art, Warsaw 1998, p. 72 (ill.).
Alina Szapocznikow. Stopping Life. Drawings and Sculptures, [ed.] Jozef Grabski, Cracow-Warsaw, 2004, p. 162 (ill.).
Biography
Alina Szapocznikow was born on May 16, 1926 in Kalisz. She came from a family of Jewish doctors. During the war she was in the ghetto in Pabianice, and then was successively imprisoned in German concentration camps: Auschwitz-Birkenau, Bergen-Belsen and Theresienstadt. After liberation, although her mother returned to Lodz, Szapocznikow decided to live in Prague. There she took up an artistic apprenticeship in the studio of sculptor Otokar Velimsky, and later began studying at the University of Arts and Industry. Thanks to a scholarship, Szapocznikow studied four years at the École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts in Paris. However, a severe illness forced her to interrupt her studies. In 1951, the artist returned to Poland and settled permanently in Warsaw, where she had a studio. Initially she made sculptures in the prevailing Socialist Realist style, and they were mainly monumental projects and realizations. After the so-called "thaw" in the mid-1950s, she was finally able to show what fascinated her: form and material. Sculptures marking the next stages in the artist's work were created then. Female figures: First Love, Difficult Age; organic forms: Creeper, Bellissima; masses of matter stretched on steel scaffolding that seem to mock the law of gravity: Mary Magdalene, Jester. In 1963, she left the country and settled permanently in Paris. At her studio in Malakoff, she experimented with new materials: polyester or polyurethane. She mainly created spatial compositions using casts of her own body, as well as those of people close to her. Toward the end of her life, some of her projects were conceptual in nature. She died ten years later, at the Praz-Coutant sanatorium in Passy, after a long struggle with cancer. The exposition of tensions and contrasts existing between beauty - ugliness, joy - sadness, inner energy - decay, vitality - bodily infirmities can be considered decisive for the reading of Szapocznikow's art. This starting point comes from looking at her works through the prism of biography, which has undergone a kind of mythologization process. On the basis of texts written from the perspective of memories, a coherent image of Szapocznikow emerged - full of life, hard hit by fate, a beautiful woman who died early. Her serenity, beauty, energy evident in her way of being and creating, juxtaposed with her hard experiences: her stay in the ghetto and concentration camps, her tuberculosis, the inability to give birth to a child and cancer, seem to cast a shadow over her entire artistic legacy and constitute one of the main interpretative keys.