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Robert Kuśmirowski

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Robert Kuśmirowski (born 1973 in Łódź), is a Polish contemporary artist whose work includes sculpture, installations, performance and photography. His work uses reconstruction of historical artefacts and settings to examine and manipulate historical themes. He lives and works in Lublin.[1][2]

Education

Kuśmirowski studied sculpture at the Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin including a year's scholarship at the University of Rennes 2. He graduated in 2003.

Work

In his installations Kuśmirowski showcases his ability to craft replicas for illusionistic effects of decay and ageing, often bringing together found objects with elements constructed out of wood, cardboard, paint and other materials.[3] Kuśmirowski had become interested in replication and falsification as a child when he forged bus passes and postage stamps for his family. This has remained a consistent theme in his work.[4]

In 2003, he rode from Paris via Luxemburg to Leipzig on a 19th-century bicycle, dressed in period garb. He documented the tour by photographing it, and processed the prints so that they seem to be original photos from the time period. He presented the photographs in an exhibition space, along with an unusable reproduction of the bicycle and his own drawings, which were yellowed in order to simulate newspaper articles on the various stages of the tour.[5] On November 14, 2004, Kusmirowski left Lodz and walked 1500 km on foot to Paris for the opening of the group exhibition "De ma Fenêtre, des artistes et leur territoire" - of which his action was a part - on December 16.[6]

In Double V (2005), he created a life-size replica of a 1970’s worker’s flat in Soviet-era architecture.[7] Wagon (2006), exhibited in the 4th Berlin Biennale, was modelled with styrofoam and cardboard after train carriages used to transport detainees to Auschwitz. At the New Museum in New York, Kuśmirowski constructed Unacabine (2008), a replica of the remote cabin in Montana where Polish-American terrorist Theodore Kaczynski conceived his mail bombing campaign against American universities, airlines and other companies. At the Barbican Centre in 2009, he transformed a gallery into a World War II-era concrete bunker – complete with flickering lights, hand-crafted nuts and bolts, and even a working draisine.[8]

Exhibitions

Kuśmirowski had his first solo exhibition while still a student (in 2002) at the Galeria Biała in Lublin, where he constructed a replica of the old railway station.[2] He has since had solo shows, among others, at Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven (2005), Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zürich (2006/07), and the Barbican Centre, London (2009).

Kuśmirowski's next exhibition is titled pain thing. This installation will be at Summerhall (The Old Royal Dick Veterinary College) in Edinburgh during the Edinburgh Fringe 2012.

http://www.summerhall.co.uk/2012/pain-thing/

Recognition

In 2004 he was nominated for a Paszport Polityki award.

Major works

Further reading

  • Yilmaz Dziewior in cooperation with Foksal Gallery Foundation (Ed.): Robert Kusmirowski, Texte of Jens Asthoff, Sebastian Cichocki, Yilmaz Dziewior, René de Guzman, Joanna Mytkowska, Janneke de Vries u.a. ; Deutsch/English/Polnisch, 2005. 252 pages, 62 pic., ISBN 978-3-7757-1758-8
  • Nowe zjawiska w sztuce polskiej po 2000, opracowanie zbiorowe, Centrum Sztuki Współczesnej Zamek Ujazdowski, Warszawa 2007

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Barbican Centre: Robert Kusmirowski: Bunker
  2. ^ a b Culture.pl: Profile
  3. ^ Christy Lange, Robert Kusmirowski Frieze Magazine, Issue 99, May 2006.
  4. ^ a b Frieze: Robert Kusmirowski
  5. ^ Robert Kusmirowski, edited by Yilmaz Dziewior Hatje Cantz Publishing.
  6. ^ Robert Kusmirowski Polish Cultural Institute, New York.
  7. ^ Jessica Lack (November 11, 2009), Robert KusmirowskiThe Guardian.
  8. ^ Foksal Gallery Foundation: Robert Kusmirowski Frieze Art Fair.
  9. ^ BBC News: Artist installs replica bunker