Maciek Stępiński Warsaw City Tennis Clubs

23.10 – 09.12.2009 Maciek Stępiński Warsaw City Tennis Clubs

Galeria Kordegarda

curator: Magda Kardasz
cooperation: Krzysztof Gutfrański

In his most recent project, prepared specially for the Kordegarda as part of the Room with a View series, Maciek Stępiński portrays selected fragments
of Warsaw’s urban landscape. The pictures of this series seem to bear an affi nity to those presented back in 2008 at the CCA Ujazdowski Castle in the
exhibition Backstage. They are also representations of an unobvious face of the Polish capital. The latest series is, however, even more subjective. This time, Stępiński talks about places close to his heart: tennis clubs, in which he played or competed as a boy. The exhibition’s title, borrowed from a name of real tennis club, evokes the period of late communism, when tennis was an elite sport, a symbol of a better, ‘Western’ lifestyle (signifi cantly, the exhibition’s title appears in the English version only) and Warsaw’s tennis clubs stood out from the dull greyness of almost everything else. Today, these are mostly abandoned or neglected places. The buildings show signs of wear and tear, and vegetation has run wild and taken control of the courts. Paradoxically,
however, these images are beautiful. This is due to, in the first place, to careful composition, to the author’s ability to capture the tension of the
picture’s form and content. This effect is enhanced by the choice of technique – the main part of the show comprises elegantly framed Cibachrome prints. This was a deliberate decision on the artist’s part. Cibachrome is a technique that is becoming obsolete, giving way under the pressure of omnipresent digitalisation.

It makes it possible to achieve incomparable sharpness and depth of the picture, an effect of elegance. Stępiński shows a world frozen in its
tracks, abandoned by people, degraded. The landscapes are imbued with a mood of autumn nostalgia – the exhibition’s timing for late October was a deliberate decision too. As a result, the view outside the window and the unique light of this time of year complement the photographic images on display. This, however, is not the end of the story. The show features also
large black-and-white digital photographs – unframed, stuck directly on the wall and window. They show other fragments of the city – building sites, naked
building structures, views of buildings at the moment of their inception. An intent viewer will recognise them as the new Decennial Stadium, being restored to its original function as a sports venue, just as they may have noticed among the photographs of Warsaw’s abandoned tennis clubs the already iconic image of the springboard at the now-closed Legia swimming pool. Maciek Stępiński’s presentation is complemented by two short fi lms, CWKS 1 and CWKS 2 – scenes from the Legia’s central tennis court under renovation, workers
drawing the white boundary lines on the brick-red background of the tartan surface.

But Maciek Stępiński’s Warsaw City Tennis Club is not just a sports story; rather, it is a narrative about a city in transformation, unifying history and the
future in images.

Information

Maciek Stępiński
Warsaw City Tennis Clubs
23.10 – 09.12.2009

Galeria Kordegarda