MÜNSTER.- In a range of media spanning paintings, films, performances, drawings and ceramics, Mikołaj Sobczak deals predominantly with the representation of historical events. With Leibeigene, Kunsthalle Münster is staging the artists first institutional solo exhibition outside Poland conceived to present the various facets of his artistic oeuvre.
Several groups of works by the artist, created in recent years, are on view at the
Kunsthalle. In addition to the series of Metamorphoses (2021)a series of cut outs that stand freely in spacehis film Upiór (2022) are being shown, surrounded by several paintings that make reference to Polish-Ukrainian history and the oppression of Ukraine. Sobczak's new film Up in the Attic (2022) has been premiered in the context of the exhibition as well as his monumental painting The Vision (2022), which was created especially for the exhibition. The work's point of departure is the socio-economic situation of the early 16th century, in which a long series of European uprisings and acts of resistance gave rise to new models for living together.
Sobczak poses questions about a new collective culture of identity and memory with his works. Referencing historical events, but also fictional narratives such as fairy tales, sagas and myths, he expands the narrative patterns underlying traditional, can-onized and instrumentalized history to include moments of emancipation. In times of political radicalization, Sobczaks art invites us to engage with the construction of histo-ry. In his paintings, he plays with the convention of classical history painting by using the original qualities of the genre for his works. His condensed renderings are often based on compositions of iconic paintings; the quotations are compiled in a collage-like manner and transferred into new contexts, not least by confronting them with mo-tifs deriving from counterculture or popular culture. With figures originating from a va-riety of contextsevery person, every place, every object has its own storyhis works are marked by a rather complex iconography. The collage as the chosen artistic form reveals fragments of history, allows history(s) to be told in all its diversity and thus breaks with a historical simplification of events. Here, history does not give the impression of being fully told or completed. On the contrary, it provides multiple points of reference the viewer can link up with. Sobczak devotes himself to stories beyond the ideological representations of official historiography. He thus creates contemporary historical images with depictions of outstanding protagonists from LGBTQI+ activism, queer and emancipatory countercultural milieus and resistance movements, in imagi-native company with fantastic characters and creatures representing the vision of a transnational utopia. His focus lies above all on marginalized personalities, those side-lined or erased from history.
Curator: Merle Radtke
Assistance: Constanze Venjakob
Mikołaj Sobczak (born 1989 in Poznań, Poland) works as an artist with video, painting and ceramics, often including performative actions, for which he regularly collaborates with the artist Nicholas Grafia. After studying at the Academy of Fine Arts Warsaw (20112016) and a scholarship at the Berlin University of the Arts (20142015), he grad-uated as a master student of Aernout Mik from the Kunstakademie Münster in 2019. Since 2021 he has been an artist-in-residence at the Rijksakadmie van beeldende kun-sten in Amsterdam. His works have been shown in solo and group exhibitions at nu-merous institutions: Kunsthalle Düsseldorf (2017); Museum of Modern Art, Warsaw (2018); Dortmunder Kunstverein (2019); Museum Ludwig, Cologne (2019); Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen, Düsseldorf (2019); Maison Populaire, Paris (2020); Ujazdowski Castle Centre for Contemporary Art, Warsaw (2020); VII Moscow Interna-tional Biennale for Young Art (2020); steirischer Herbst, Graz (2021); MUDAM, Luxem-bourg (2021) and the Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin (2021). In 2021 he was awarded the most important prize for art in Poland Paszport Polityki. In 2022, Galeria Bielska BWA, Bielsko-Biala will present a solo exhibition of the artists work. Sobczak lives and works in Warsaw and Amsterdam.