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Władysław Strzemiński
Polish avant-garde painter (1893–1952)
Polish avant-garde painter (1893–1952)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Władysław Strzemiński |
| image | Strzemiński.jpg |
| image_upright | 1.1 |
| caption | Strzemiński in 1932 |
| birth_date | 21 November 1893 |
| birth_place | Minsk, Russian Empire |
| death_date | |
| death_place | Łódź, Poland |
| resting_place | Old Cemetery, Łódź, Poland |
| nationality | Polish |
| known_for | Painting, drawing, teaching |
| movement | Constructivism |
| spouse |
Władysław Strzemiński (Polish pronunciation: ; ; 21 November 1893 – 26 December 1952) was a Polish painter, art theoretician, pedagogue, and soldier. He is regarded as a pioneer of Constructivist avant-garde of the 1920s and 1930s and the developer of the theory of unism (Polish: unizm).
Life and work
Strzemiński was born in Minsk to Maksymilian Strzemiński and Ewa Rozalia Olechnowicz, both of whom were ethnically Polish and cultivated Polish traditions. His father was a lieutenant colonel in the Imperial Russian Army, who hoped for a military career for his son. In 1914, Władysław Strzemiński graduated from the Military School of Civil Engineering in Saint Petersburg. During World War I, he served as second lieutenant at the Osowiec Fortress. In 1915, he was severely wounded and crippled in the Attack of the Dead Men, where he became the commander after the death of Vladimir Kotlinsky and for which he received the Order of St. George. The injuries were so acute that portions of Strzemiński's right leg and left arm were amputated, and he partially lost sight in one of his eyes. In 1920, he married painter Katarzyna Kobro.
In 1922, he moved to Wilno (now Vilnius), and in the following year supported Vytautas Kairiūkštis in creating the first avant-garde art exhibition in what is now the territory of Lithuania (then part of Poland, under Polish rule).
In November 1923, he moved to Warsaw, where with Henryk Berlewi he founded the constructivist group Blok.

During the 1920s, he formulated his theory of Unism (Unizm in Polish). His paintings influenced the musical compositions of Polish composers Zygmunt Krauze, the creator of unistic music, and Marcin Stańczyk, the inventor of Aftersounds (inspired by Strzemiński’s Afterimages). He is an author of a revolutionary book titled "The theory of vision". He was co creator of unique avant-garde art collection in Łódź gathered together thanks to the enthusiasm of members of the "a.r." group as Katarzyna Kobro and Henryk Stażewski (the artists) and Julian Przyboś and Jan Brzękowski (the poets).
In postwar Łódź, Strzemiński was an instructor at the Higher School of Plastic Arts and Design Neoplastic Room at the Museum of Art, Łódź, where one of his students was Halina Ołomucka, survivor of the Nazi concentration camps. His Neoplastic Room was installed in the museum in 1948 but was removed in 1950 as it failed to fit in with the socialist realist aesthetic imposed by Włodzimierz Sokorski, the minister of culture of the Polish United Workers' Party.
His works have been exhibited in such museums around the world as Centre Pompidou, Museo Reina Sofia, Moderna Museet Malmö and Whitechapel Gallery.
In film
He is the subject of Afterimage (2016), the final film by Andrzej Wajda.
Selected paintings
File:Strzeminski Wladyslaw Kompozycja syntetyczna 1.jpg|Synthetic composition I (1923) File:Strzeminski Wladyslaw Martwa natura 3.jpg|Still life 3 (1923) File:Strzeminski Wladyslaw Kompozycja unistyczna 4.jpg|Unitist composition 4 (1925) File:Strzeminski Wladyslaw Martwa natura VI.jpg|Still life (1926) File:Strzeminski Wladyslaw Martwa natura 1926.jpg|Still life (1926) File:Strzeminski Wladyslaw Kompozycja architektoniczna 1.jpg|Architectural composition I (1926) File:Strzeminski Wladyslaw Martwa natura 1926-27.jpg|Still life IV (1926/1927) File:Strzeminski Wladyslaw Kompozycja architektoniczna 4a.jpg|Architetural composition IVa (1927) File:Władysław Strzemiński, "Pajzaż łódzki od strony Retkini".jpg|Landscape of Łódź Seen From Retkinia (1941)
References
Bibliography
- Władysław Strzemiński. Readability of Images. Proceedings of the international conference devoted to the work of Władysław Strzemiński, 13–14 October 2011, Muzeum Sztuki, Łódź 2015.
- Władysław Strzemiński 1893–1952. On the 100th Anniversary of His Birth, Muzeum Sztuki w Łodzi, Łódź 1993.
References
- Mazur, Brenda. (24 January 2023). "Podążając za Strzemińskim". Wilnoteka.
- (2001). "Katarzyna Kobro: A Sculptor of Space". Artibus et Historiae.
- (2008). "Lithuanian Art and the Avant-Garde of the 1920s Vytautas Kairiūkštis and the New Art Exhibition in Vilnius". Lituanus.
- "Zygmunt Krauze - the composer's life and work".
- Tabakiernik, Marta. (2015-12-01). "Marcin Stańczyk’s Afterimages and Aftersounds – Reflections and Self-Reflections". Musicology Today.
- "Afterimages of life. Wladyslaw Strzeminski and rights for art", red: Jaroslaw Lubiak, Paulina Kur-Maj, 2011, Lodz
- [http://en.auschwitz.org/m/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=353&Itemid=8 Halina Olomucki], website of the [[Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum]]. Retrieved 3 May 2012
- "UNE AVANT-GARDE POLONAISE - KATARZYNA KOBRO ET WŁADYSŁAW STRZEMIŃSKI".
- "Kobro and Strzemiński. Avant-Garde Prototypes".
- "KOBRO & STRZEMIŃSKI NEW ART IN TURBULENT TIMES".
- "Adventures of the Black Square: Abstract Art and Society 1915 – 2015".
- (21 September 2016). "Film Review: ‘Afterimage’". Variety Media, LLC.
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