Pawel althamer biography of martin


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Paweł Althamer

Polish artist

Paweł Althamer (born 12 May , Warsaw) is a Polish contemporary sculptor, performer, collaborative artist and creator of installations, and video art.[1]

Life and work

In the years , he studied sculpture at the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts.[2] Since the mids, he has been collaborating with the Foksal Gallery in Warsaw.

In , he participated in Manifesta 3 in Ljubljana, Slovenia. In , he won the Vincent Award from the Broere Charitable Foundation in the Netherlands. In , he presented the exhibition One of many with the Nicola Trussardi Foundation.

Paweł Althamer - Fondation Vincent Van Gogh Arles: Paweł Althamer (born 12 May , Warsaw) is a Polish contemporary sculptor, performer, collaborative artist and maker of installations, and video art. [1] In the years , he studied sculpture at the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts. [2]. Since the mids, he has been collaborating with the Foksal Gallery in Warsaw.

His longest-running collaboration is with the Nowolipie Group, an organisation in Warsaw for adults with mental or physical disabilities, to whom he has been teaching a Friday night ceramics class since the early s. In Althamer arranged for the group to wear matching overalls and obtain a trip on a biplane, which became the subject of a short film by Althamer’s frequent collaborator, Artur Żmijewski (Winged, ).

Althamer was part of the so-called Kowalski Studio at the Warsaw Academy of Satisfactory Arts, along with many of today’s leading generation of Polish artists, including Artur Żmijewski and Katarzyna Kozyra. Under the functional title ‘Common Space—Private Space’, Kowalski foregrounded the work of art as an effect of complex non-verbal communication performed by artists in interaction with each other, neutralising individualism: ‘each of the participants had at his/her disposal “a space of their own” […], where they could assemble elements of their own visual language, and the “common space” open to everyone, where they could conduct simultaneous dialogues with the other participants.

All without using words.’

Althamer's large series of works "The Venetians" was exhibited in the arsenale section of the Venice Biennale.[3] Also in , he took part in Performa 13 presenting Biba Performa where he collaborated with multiple artists.

In , he was awarded the Officer's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta for his artistic achievements.[4]

He is represented by Neugerriemschneider, Berlin and Fundacja Galerii Foksal, Warsaw.[5] His solo exhibitions include Bonnefantenmuseum, Maastricht, Institute of Contemporary Arts, London,[6]Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin,[7] Musée National d’Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris[8]New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York,[9] and Helsinki Art Museum.[10]

Further reading

  • Paula Van Den Bosch and others, Pawel Althamer: The Vincent Award , Hatje Cantz () ISBN&#;
  • Pawel Althamer: Espace , Centre Georges Pompidou Service Commercial (), ISBN&#; - see also [1]
  • Common Task, Pawel Althamer, Contemporary Art Oxford (), edited by Suzanne Cotter, co-edited and constructed by Åbäke, printed in Brodno, Poland.
  • Pawel Althamer, by Adam Szymczyk, Suzanne Cotter and Roman Kurzmeyer, Phaidon Press () ISBN&#;
  • Claire Bishop, "Something for Everyone: The Art of Pawel Althamer’, Artforum, February, pp.&#;–
  • Pawel Althamer - I (am), by Satu Metsola, Pirkko Siitari and Sanna Tuulikangas, Parvs () ISBN&#;

See also

References

External links