The Competition Committee for the 2024 exhibition in the Polish Pavilion at Venice Biennale is in session – phase II. Jury consisting of: prof. Elżbieta Banecka, Andrzej Biernacki, prof. Tadeusz Boruta, Jarosław Denisiuk, Jagna Domżalska, Janusz Janowski PhD (chairman of the Jury), Janusz Kapusta, Agnieszka Komar-Morawska, Zbigniew Makarewicz PhD, Maciej Mazurek PhD, prof. Kazimierz Nowosielski PhD, Urszula Święcicka, Joanna Warsza, Karolina Ziębińska-Lewandowska PhD. The jury recognised the project 'Polish Exercises in the Tragedy of the World. Between Germany and Russia' by artist Ignacy Czwartos and curators – Piotr Bernatowicz and Dariusz Karłowicz, as the best. In the voting process, the project received 11 out of 14 votes. This is what the curators wrote about the idea of the winning project:
presents an image of Poland as a homogeneous, closed country, focused only on itself and speaking from a position of victimhood, and does not reflect the state of the contemporary Polish art scene.
Simultaneously, they speak positively about the other projects, including the one they voted for:
Before the public gets to know the winning project's assumptions, the opinion of three jury members who voted against Ignacy Czwartos' exhibition design is published. On the same day, Gazeta Wyborcza published an article by Witold Mrozek entitled: He paints football fans and 'cursed soldiers'. Is he the one to represent Poland at the Venice Art Biennale? (oryg. Maluje kibiców i "żołnierzy wyklętych". To on ma reprezentować Polskę na Biennale Sztuki w Wenecji?) (1), reports the results of the competition. The title itself is a manipulation. Unlike painters such as Marcin Maciejowski, for example, Czwartos does not paint fans. He paints himself, his children and other artists wearing fan scarves, which in his paintings become something between a priest's stole (a rather ironic reference to football's quasi-religious treatment) and a historical polish nobleman's belt (kontusz). Football fans, stadiums and all the associated settings do not appear in his paintings. The author's intention is to create for Wyborcza readers with intellectual aspirations an image of a not very cultured person from the fan community (it also has a whiff of superiority - the assumption that these are people of low culture, which is, after all, a cliché). Can such a person be a representative of Poland at one of the most important art exhibitions in the world? Absolutely not! - is what a concerned reader of Wyborcza should be thinking.
The Minister of Culture and National Heritage, Professor Piotr Gliński, has finally accepted the selection of the jury for the Ignacy Czwartos exhibition in the Polish Pavilion at the 60th Biennale in Venice. Why was there such a delay in the decision? Did he not, with this delay, favour the left-wing critics who are trying to accuse the selection of a certain ambiguity? Such doubts are raised by Amelia Sarnowska in an article published on Onet.pl, titled Mr Director's colleagues, a short bench and "Polish pain". This is the backstage of the Polish competition at the Venice Biennale (oryg. Koledzy pana dyrektora, króka ławka i "polski ból". Oto kulisy polskiego konkursu na Biennale w Wenecji) (2), which talks about the allegedly problematic backstage of the selection of Ignacy Czwartos' exhibition project.
Through the voice of an anonymous interlocutor, the Ringier Axel Springer online magazine tries to create an atmosphere of controversy and nepotism around the selection of Czwartos' project. The problem arises because the jury was chaired by Janusz Janowski, who had previously curated Czwartos's exhibition at the Zachęta Gallery. However, the author fails to inform the reader that the director of the Zachęta Gallery is always the chairman of the jury, as it is the Zachęta Gallery that takes care of the Polish pavilion in Venice. In all previous competitions this has been the case. Moreover, it was not Janowski who submitted the design for the pavilion - the competition was open to everyone, including Czwartos. Even if Janowski had abstained from voting, Czwartos's design would still have won with an overwhelming majority of the jury's votes. The text is riddled with value assessments from an unknown source - an anonymous but experienced employee of Zachęta. A significant sentence of the text reads as follows:
Philip Oltermann's article in the left-leaning British daily The Guardian is entitled: 'An anti-European manifesto': Poland's Venice Biennale entry defies inclusive theme. The title quotes Karolina Plinta, a critic for the left-wing Polish art magazine Szum, who commented on the project and the artist's painting:
Apart from statements made by Karolina Plinta and one of the jury members, Joanna Warsza, neither the artist nor the curators were quoted. No one contacted them for this purpose.
Gazeta Wyborcza immediately informs its readers about the text in the Guardian: 'Anti-European manifesto'. Guardian on Polish artist promoted by the Ministry of Culture (published 13th Oct 2023 at 14:20) (3). The author of the article is the indefatigable editor Mrozek. And so the statement made by a critic from the niche magazine Szum is published as the position of the "foreign press" regarding the Ignacy Czwartos Exhibition Project.
The most important British newspaper writes about the Ignacy Czwartos’ exhibition project that Minister Gliński is sending to the most important event of the art world in Venice. And asks the Lithuanian Foreign Ministry about the crimes of 'Łupaszka' Mrozek begins. Of course, he does not mention that the Guardian is a left-leaning newspaper. And why does he consider it the most important newspaper in Britain? For the Left, perhaps. He also makes no reference to the Guardian's reply from Lithuania's Foreign Ministry, whose representative says it will not comment on art and history because that is the job of art critics and historians. But the existence of undeniable 'crimes' is suggested by the question itself. Obviously, the Guardian's writer is unaware that Lupashka's crimes were attributed to him by the Communists, who themselves persecuted and brutally murdered both Lupashka and soldiers like him. So they could hardly be objective in their assessments. However, apart from Gazeta Wyborcza, the Guardian's writer is probably unfamiliar with other sources of Polish history. Gazeta Wyborcza, in turn, quotes the Guardian, and so the circle of self-confirming information comes full circle.
Gazeta Wyborcza publishes an interview with Anda Rottenberg (an influential art critic associated with the current government, former official at the Ministry of Culture and Arts and director of the Zachęta National Gallery of Art): Anda Rottenberg: 'Blood, sweat and tears’ await us after the Law and Justice governments (oryg. Andra Rottenberg: Po rządach PiS-u czekają nas “krew, pot i łzy”), in which she states that the director of Zachęta, Janusz Janowski PhD, should be dismissed and the Ignacy Czwartos exhibition project in Venice should be cancelled - there is still time until 13 January. And as if to fulfil the wish (or order) of Anda Rottenberg, on 22 December, just before Christmas, Minister of Culture Bartłomiej Sienkiewicz promptly dismissed Janusz Janowski PhD, from his post as director of Zachęta Gallery, thus breaking the contract legally concluded with him and valid until the end of 2025.
After only a week, the acting director of Zachęta - Ms Justyna Markiewicz (a close associate of Hanna Wróblewska, with whom she sits on the board of the Zachęta Fine Arts Society at the Zachęta National Gallery of Art) - terminated the contract concluded with the team of the project "Polish Exercises in the Tragedy of the World. Between Germany and Russia', explaining the Minister justified the decision on the basis of the competition rules. However, it turns out that according to the competition regulations, the minister cannot decide to withdraw a project that has already been accepted. Moreover, according to the Competition Regulations, such a change can only be made in the case of objective and/or fortuitous circumstances, and the decision in such a case is made by the Director of Zachęta. Isn't this the reason why it was necessary to get rid of Janowski as quickly as possible, which resulted in the breach of a legal contract? Just the way Anda Rottenberg had in mind.
3rd January 2024
The plan to cancel the Ignacy Czwartos's exhibition in Venice was carried out ten days ahead of schedule.
[1] W. Mrozek, Maluje kibiców i "żołnierzy wyklętych". To on ma reprezentować Polskę na Biennale Sztuki w Wenecji?, „Gazeta Wyborcza”, article dated 20.09.2023, available at www.wyborcza.pl (accessed:18.02.2024).
[2] A. Sarnowska, Koledzy pana dyrektora, krótka ławka i "polski ból". Oto kulisy polskiego konkursu na Biennale w Wenecji, article dated 04.11.2023, available at www.onet.pl (accessed: 18.02.2024).
[3] W. Mrozek, "Antyeuropejski manifest". "Guardian" o polskim artyście, którego promuje ministerstwo kultury, Gazeta Wyborcza, article dated 13.11.2023 available at www.wyborcza.pl, (accessed 18.02.2024).
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