Karol's Wieczorek book monography in our bookshop already
year of publication: 2012
size: 155 × 223 mm
volume: 192 pages
edition: 500 pieces
binding: softcover
reproductions in colour
languages: Polish/English
graphic design and typesetting: Katarzyna Goczoł, Magdalena Machno, Jan Piechota
publisher: BWA Contemporary Art Gallery
ISBN 978-83-88254-67-3
List of contest:
Karol manifold Tadeusz Nyczek
People
Nothing interesting… Agata Stronciwilk
The Bow
Animals
Things
Crooked images Zuzanna Sokołowska
In an indispensable space
Dreams
(Un-)necessary beings
Catching my own tail, or a desperate attempt at a self-analysis Karol Wieczorek
Biography
Price: 15 zł (about 4 euro)
Visit our bookshop or order by e-mail:
ksiegarnia@bwa.katowice.pl
Karol Wieczorek ‘Evil eye’ — monographic exhibition In 1972 Karol Wieczorek graduated from the School of Graphic Design and Painting in Katowice, receiving a diploma with distinction and a medal. For...
‘I can sometimes see Wieczorek clad in a loose russet coat belted with a rope, baggy trousers tied with a rusty buckle just below his knees, a leather hat with a wide brim, as he is walking along a field path, his clumpy boots stirring up dust into mist that lightly swirls around his feet. He is lugging a box with painting instruments in one arm, and a webbing sack containing a change of shirt, a blanket for the night, a handkerchief and a tobacco box in the other. His problem is whether to paint a mural in a Paduan church or a portrait of a rich merchant’s wife from a nearby town. The merchant’s wife would like to be beautiful but she is not, and Karol is a little scared of this work. He would like to paint her bathing in a wooden tub, as the body would divert the attention away from the face. But what about the jealous husband? Will he not chase him away with a stick when he realises Karol wants to strip her naked? Maybe he should go for a church then… Holy Joe is cunning and the painting much duller, but he could have a good feed up at the presbytery. And he might be able to paint some scenes from “The Divine Comedy”… Karol has been profoundly impressed by this book ever since it was published a dozen or so years earlier. His mind keeps reliving Dante’s and Virgil’s travels through Hell, Purgatory and Heaven. He has put it down like this: “It is tempting to refer to such a precise, beautiful and clear construction…” But will this Holy Joe allow him to spread the wings of his imagination? I watch him disappearing in the distance, surrounded by clouds of dust. The 15th century is coming to a close’.
Tadeusz Nyczek (fragment)