BEIJING.- X Museum is presenting Polish artist Krzysztof Grzybaczs first institutional solo exhibition, titled Does It Ever Happen. The exhibition runs from November 1, 2024, to February 14, 2025, in Gallery 1-3 at X Museum in Beijing. It features over 20 works from Grzybaczs recent practice, including five new paintings and eight drawings created specifically for this exhibition. Raised in a suburb of Kraków, Poland, Grzybacz began exploring painting at a young age, under the influence of his father, an amateur painter. His work draws inspiration from everyday life, capturing moments that are both ordinary and filled with unexpected coincidences. Like many artists who came of age at the turn of the millennium, Grzybacz absorbed much of his worldview through mass media. Both experimental, avant-garde animations in television programs and Polish movies, have deeply informed his artistic practice, and subsequently materialized in his paintings. Best known for its expressive and surrealistic style, Polish animation prioritizes knowledge over entertainment, establishing a distinctive approach both within Central Europe and beyond. Growing up immersed in this environment, Grzybaczs works are rich in narrative, evoking scenes akin to those found in novels.
Grzybacz skillfully arranges his works in unconventional ways, offering bold perspectives on everyday life, where everything appears to flow effortlessly. The human body often takes center stage in his pieceswhether in conversation, observation, or as a form stretching across the canvas. In his paintings, bodies are transformed, morphing into illusive devices or factories that are both familiar and alienated. Grzybacz blends different perspectives, merging subject and object until an ambiguous pictorial space comes to play. In his work, various forms of teeth and tongues outline the pathof conversation and language, with each mouth metaphorically establishing a link of communication. Flowers simultaneously represent both what the eyes see and the colors that seem to flow from them. These intangible, bodily moments are made material and visible by the artist.
The formation of society depends on the exchange of information and interconnectednessindividuals alone cannot create a society. In the information age, digital communication technology has ushered in a new era of information sharing, fundamentally transforming how people connect with the world. This innovation also propels the evolution of media, compelling us to reflect on our pre-existing cognitive frameworks and altering the way we form relationships with others and our surroundings. Polish sociologist Zygmunt Bauman captures this phenomenon in Making the Familiar Unfamiliar, describing how all the old ways of doing something no longer work, but the new ways have not yet been invented.
Between this failed past and the impending future lies a constantly shifting society and fragile interpersonal connections, shaped by endless technological iterations and the infinite scroll. In response, Grzybacz chooses to become a sensitive outsider, observing life through the eye of the beholder. He focuses on specific subjectspeople, flowers, a scene, or a conversationobserving, dissecting, reassembling, and collaging familiar visual elements. Through his paintings, he examines the meaning of existence, searching for and speculating a new way forward.
Krzysztof Grzybacz, born in 1993, graduated with a Masters degree from the Fine Arts Academy in Kraków in 2019. He currently lives and works in Kraków, Poland. Raised in the countryside near the city, Grzybacz drew early inspiration from his father, a former painter, as well as from the contrast between mass media and the surrounding natural environment.
His work has been widely exhibited internationally. Recent solo exhibitions include At the Center of the Onion is Another Onion (2023) at Harkawik Gallery in New York, and Krzysztof Grzybacz (2022) at Dawid Radziszewski Gallery in Warsaw. His works were presented during Frieze London 2023, Art Basel Miami Beach 2023 and Art Basel 2024.
Curators: Michael Xufu Huang, Lisha Yang