Just After the War
03.10.2015 – 10.01.2016 Just After the War
Zachęta – National Gallery of Art
curators: Joanna Kordjak, Agnieszka Szewczyk
co-operation: Magdalena Komornicka
Chaos, widespread poverty, mass repatriation, the obligatory migration of millions of people forced by the decisions of the conferences in Yalta and Potsdam to leave their homes and settle “the wild west”, fear of the Red Army, but also of the return of the Germans, rampant banditism, looting, lynches and pogroms against Jews: this is the shocking image that emerges of Poland just after the war. This image is comprised of the dismantling of existing social structures, the destabilization of the state, mistrust towards the new communist authorities, and also uncertainty as to the new borders manipulated by cold war propaganda.
The exhibition is an attempt to answer the question as to how the complicated social moods and political tensions in post-war Poland found their expression in the visual arts, photographs, film and also architecture and design. Is the key period in modern Polish history of 1944–1949 equally important in the field of art? How were the first years of the new, dynamically changing socio-political reality and atmosphere, on the one hand the “euphoria of rebuilding” and on the other the “Great Fear” described by Marcin Zaremba, interpreted by artists? What function was art supposed to play in this configuration? In what situation did new artists make their debuts? Do the war and 1945 really constitute a caesura after which everything began afresh, or did these revolutionary times create an opportunity to realise postulates and conceptions that had been hatched earlier (such as workers’ housing estates or “cheap and beautiful furniture for all”).
Just After the War
03.10.2015 – 10.01.2016
Zachęta – National Gallery of Art
pl. Małachowskiego 3, 00-916 Warsaw
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Godziny otwarcia:
Tuesday – Sunday 12–8 p.m.
Thursday – free entry
ticket office is open until 7.30 p.m.