Magdalena Więcek – Glin. Sculptures and works on paper

September 20 – November 20, 2019

Olszewski Gallery. The exhibition as part of the Warsaw Gallery Weekend

In 1807 the British chemist Sir Humphry Bartholomew Davy isolated a light silvery-white metal from clay. This unusual substance was then called argent d’argile by the French and Lehmsilber by the Germans. Nowadays, there are two names in Polish: glin is the name of a chemical element used in science, and aluminum describes a metallic material used in industry. Aluminum is the most common metal in the earth’s crust, but the ease with which it binds with oxygen meant that the properties of the pure element were not known to mankind until modern times. In the 1970s, when Magdalena Więcek’s metal sculptures were created, aluminum, at least in the countries which were behind the Iron Curtain, was still an exclusive symbol of modernity, and the use of this material in art was an avant-garde gesture.

The figure of a strong, independent woman artist was also thoroughly modern at the time. In Poland, as early as in the 1950s, a whole constellation of women sculptors remembered anew today began to come to the fore, to which Więcek also belonged. Their abstract form carries the timeless spirit of architecture. The intersecting arches are reminiscent of both the vaults of Gothic cathedrals and that of parabolic contemporary architecture. Like hanging roofs, the sculptural elements seem to be resisting the force of gravity.

The importance that the motifs of flight and transcendence had in Więcek’s work in the 1960s and 1970s is confirmed by the titles the artist gave to her sculptures from this period: Close to the Earth, Flight, Detachment, Flight, Horizons, Infinity, Sacrum. In this context an untitled work from 1967 – a strip of thick aluminum sheet bent into a dynamic knot – can be interpreted as a sculptural equivalent of aerobatics. The pilot making the loop experiences overloads, and the world stands on its head for a moment.

curator: Aleksander Wawrzyniak

Dimensions of reality: Female minimal

February 23 – June 20, 2020

Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac. Paris

This exhibition brings together fourteen pioneering women artists from Europe and the Americas, who each contributed in their original and uncompromising way to expanding the scope of the minimal aesthetics beyond the orthodox category of Minimal Art. Through a large selection of sculptures, installations, paintings and works on paper dating from the 1920s to the early 1980s, Dimensions of Reality: Female Minimal explores new perspectives and genealogies in the field of geometric abstraction, highlighting the complex and often subtle relationships between formalism and identity politics.

Artists: Feliza Bursztyn, Rosemarie Castoro, Maria Lai,  Liliane Lijn, Verena Loewensberg, Mary Miss, Kazuko Miyamoto, Lucia Moholy, Vera Molnar, Marlow Moss, Lydia Okumura, Lolo Soldevilla, Magdalena Wiecek, Shizuko Yoshikawa.

Curated by Anke Kempkes & Pierre-Henri Foulon.

PAS DE DEUX by Magdalena Więcek and Natalia Załuska

photo Christine König Galerie

November 22, 2018 – January 11, 2019

Christine König Galerie. Wien, Austria

The conflation of the works by Magdalena Więcek and Natalia Załuska in the context of the exhibi-tion PAS DE DEUX is due to the cultural resonance chamber and frame of reference of their com-mon country of origin, Poland, as well as to the fascination of the young artist Załuska for the aes-thetic innovations of the 1950s and 1960s: Magdalena Więcek, who died in 2008, counted amongst the most significant sculptors of her country, yet had an impact far beyond its borders. Karl Prantl already invited her in 1963 to his legendary symposia. Her sculpture which was created at that time can still be seen in the quarry of St. Margarethen in Burgenland, Austria.

Retrospective

November 16, 2013 – January 5, 2014

Museum of Contemporary Sculpture. Center of Polish Sculpture in Orońsko.

For the second time the Center of Polish Sculpture presents the works of Magdalena Więcek, an outstanding sculptor and respected teacher. The artist’s first exhibition in Orońsko took place in „Orangeria” Gallery in 1993. Several sculptures were presented, mainly from the „Sacrum” series, and several drawings. Exactly twenty years have passed since then. The current exhibition includes a wide selection of Więcek’s works, examples of the most important sculpture cycles, works created n the years 1954 – 2008.