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Maciej Szańkowski, rzeźba bez tytułu, praca z Wiener Internationale Gartenschau, 1974, granit, Wiedeń, park Oberlaa [uszkodzona], photo Andrzej Pieńkos
Licencja: CC BY-SA 4.0, Warunki licencji
Fotografia przedstawiająca Sculpture by Maciej Szankowski in Vienna
Maciej Szańkowski, rzeźba bez tytułu, praca z Wiener Internationale Gartenschau, 1974, granit, Wiedeń, park Oberlaa [uszkodzona], photo Andrzej Pieńkos
Licencja: CC BY-SA 4.0, Warunki licencji
Fotografia przedstawiająca Sculpture by Maciej Szankowski in Vienna
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ID: POL-001452-P

Sculpture by Maciej Szankowski in Vienna

ID: POL-001452-P

Sculpture by Maciej Szankowski in Vienna

Variants of the name:
praca z WIG’74 - Wiener Internationale Gartenschau

The large recreational park on the outskirts of Oberlaa contains more than a dozen sculptures by various authors, made during an international open-air workshop in 1974 when the park was founded. One of the most interesting was a work by Maciej Szankowski, but it has been collapsed and lying in pieces among the trees for many years now. It is not known when exactly the sculpture was damaged.

Szańkowski participated in several sculpture plein-airs abroad, realising large abstract constructions in metal, stone or concrete. From the early 1970s onwards, he experimented in a variety of materials, creating subtle spatial constructions that seemed to defy the laws of gravity, operating with delicate tilts (e.g. the work at the Nuremberg symposium), a perverse play of verticals and levels, etc. Carved in granite during an international sculpture symposium in Vienna, the thin granite pillars originally stood on a high pedestal, one metre apart, forming a kind of gateway through which two broken, recumbent beams, with shapes and incisions analogous to the pillars and inspired by wooden construction, seemingly flowed smoothly. These perhaps suggested the idea of '(...) "tori" - the Japanese gateway to heaven.' This latter hypothesis would be supported by the fact that 'tori' were always made of wood, and in the Oberlaa sculpture for the second and last time in his oeuvre - as in his 1964-65 'Studies of Space'. - Szankowski does not respect the properties of the material, but imitates the shape of wooden beams in granite" (Bożena Kowalska).

Two years later, a similar reflection on elementary architectural forms resulted in a much larger open-air realisation in Maribor. And in the same year, 1974, Szańkowski erected a monumental metal composition of spheres in Warsaw, on the Kopernika estate, in a completely different style to the Viennese work.

Related persons:
Time of origin:
1974
Creator:
Maciej Szańkowski (rzeźbiarz)(preview)
Bibliography:
  • B. Kowalska, Maciej Szańkowski, Warszawa 1996 (kat. wyst. w Galerii Zachęta i Orońsku), s. 61-62, 141.
Keywords:
Author:
prof. Andrzej Pieńkos
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